PRIME BIG DEAL DAYS – Better Deals Than Black Friday! (Day #1)

PRIME BIG DEAL DAYS

Did you know that Amazon’s Prime Big Deal Days has just started? This is one of the sales where Amazon offers its best deals of the year, but there’s a catch: these deals are available to Amazon Prime members only (Get a free 30-day trial). Here is our compilation of some of the best deals we stumbled on while browsing the site this morning. Please note that Geeks are Sexy might get a small commission from qualifying purchases done through our posts (as an Amazon associate or a member of other affiliate programs. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.)

In Canada? the Amazon Canada Big Deal Days page is here.

In the UK? It’s here!

Toys and Games:

Save BIG on HUNDREDS of BOARD GAMES! (Be sure to scroll down at the link! There’s a LOT of really cool games down the list! You can also use the category buttons near the top of the page!)

MASSIVE SALE on FUNKO POP! Figures

Up to 49% Off on Star Wars Toys, Action Figures and More

STAR WARS The Black Series The Mandalorian Artillery Stormtrooper Premium Electronic Helmet$124.99 $84.99

LEGO Star Wars at-at Walker 75288 40th Anniversary Collectible Buildig Set$169.99 $118.99

LEGO Star Wars BD-1 75335 Posable Droid Figure Model Building Kit$99.99 $69.99

LEGO Marvel Hulkbuster 76210 Building Set$549.99 $299.99

Up to 53% Off on Magic: The Gathering Trading Card Games

JvmuSaber Fx-Saber Dueling-Force RGB Lightsaber$68.89 $39.61

Up to 56% Off on Marvel Toys, Action Figures and More!

Arcade1Up Terminator 2 Arcade Machine$699.99 $474.99

Save Big on Squishmallow and Squishville Plush
 

Halloween Costumes:

Up to 53% off on Rubies Costumes (A LOT of costumes from many pop culture franchises!)

Up to 52 % Off on Sexy Costumes from Leg Avenue
 

Electronics and Gadgets:

Up to 57% off on Charging products from Anker (Cable and Chargers)

Apple Watch SE (2nd Gen) [GPS 40mm] Smart Watch$249.00 $199.00

Save Up to 40% on Google Pixel Buds A-Series and Watch

Save Big on iPad 9th Gen Tablets with AppleCare

Up to 45% Off on Headphones by Anker Soundcore

Up to 50% Off on Beats Headphones and Earbuds

Google Pixel Buds Pro – Noise Canceling Earbuds$199.99 $119.99

Google Pixel 7a – Unlocked Android Cell Phone$499.00 $399.00

Up to 40% off on Ring Doorbell, Cameras, Alarms and Bundles

Up to 50% Off on Scooters, E-Bikes and Hoverboards from Segway, Jetson and more

Up to 45% off on EF ECOFLOW Power Stations and Solar Generators

Anker SOLIX F1200 Portable Power Station (1800W, 1229Wh) (Can charge the average smartphone over 100 times!)$1,399.99 $699.99
 

Computer, PC Gaming, and Accessories:

Up to 41% Off on Gaming Laptops powered by NVIDIA

Save Big on Gaming Monitors from Omen, Alienware, and more

Save Big on Handpicked PCs and Monitors from HP, Samsung, Acer, and more
 

Movies and Series:

Up to 71% Off on 4K Movies

Up to 72% Off on Top TV Collections and Complete Series (Game of Thrones, The Office, Supernatural, House of the Dragons, and A LOT MORE!

Up to 60% Off on Anime Series and Movies
 

Amazon Smart Home Devices:

Up to 49% Off on on Echo Smart Speakers with Disney and Star Wars Bundles

Up to 50% off on Blink Smart Home Doorbells and Cameras

Up to 50% Off on Amazon Fire Tablets for the Whole Family

Up to 48% Off on Amazon Smart Home Devices (Thermostat, Smart Plugs, Air Quality Monitor, etc.)
 

Smart TVs:

Save Big on Sony Smart TVs and Blu-ray Players

Up to 47% Off on Select Smart Fire TVs (from 32″ of 75″)
 

BOOKS:

Up to 58% Off on Science Fiction, Fantasy, Mystery, & Thriller Books
 

Other Deals:

Up to 60% Off on iRobot Roomba Vacuums, Combos, Mops, and Accessories

Save on Ninja Air Fryer, Blender, Cookware, and More

Save Big on Dyson Vacuums and Air Purifiers

Up to 50% Off on Waterpik Oral Care

Up to 45% off on Vitamix Blenders

Up to 50% Off on Instant Pot Kitchen Appliances

Up to 59% off on Philips Kitchen, Espresso, and Home Appliances

Please note that you can check all Prime BIG DEALS days deals by visiting this dedicated page on Amazon.com.

Geeks are Sexy might get a small commission from qualifying purchases done through our posts (as an Amazon associate or a member of other affiliate programs.)



Turn Your Firepit into a Barbarian Fantasy with Fireproof Skulls!

fireproof skulls

That’s right, you can now put fireproof skulls into your firepit (or anywhere you can actually make a fire) to turn a rather mundane evening watching logs (or gas) burn into a scene that seems to come directly out of a Conan the Barbarian movie. The skulls are steel reinforced and made using lava granules and heat resistant ceramic, so heat will apparently not damage them.

That’s it, now I want to pile 10,000 of these into a pyramid, Genghis Khan-style, and then set fire to them. That would be awesome.

[Myard DELUXE Logs – Imitated Human Skull Fire Gas Log for Natural Gas / Liquid Propane Fireplace Fire-Pit (Aged Dark Grey Skull)]

Please note that Geeks are Sexy might get a small commission from qualifying purchases done through our posts (as an Amazon associate or a member of other affiliate programs.)



Smooth McGroove Does the High Above the Land Theme from Shovel Knight Acapella

From Smooth McGroove:

The Shovel Knight soundtrack has tons of amazing songs, and I took my sweet time deciding that this would be the first one I’d do. It’s not the first song I started working on from this game, but turns out it’s the first one I finished xD Jake Kaufman is one of the greatest modern video game composers, and if you haven’t listened to this soundtrack, do yourself a favor and check it out. This acapella is easily one of the most technically difficult I’ve ever done on my channel, and I hope you enjoy the work I put into it!

Happy Doot Doot Season Everyone! [Comic]

Speaking of “Doot Doot” season, Amazon currently has some BIG sales on Halloween costumes at these links:

Up to 53% off on Rubies Costumes (A LOT of costumes from many pop culture franchises!)

Up to 52 % Off on Sexy Costumes from Leg Avenue

[Source: @idiotoftheeast]

Please note that Geeks are Sexy might get a small commission from qualifying purchases done through our posts (as an Amazon associate or a member of other affiliate programs.)

Why Are Useless Decongestants Still on Shelves?

If you’ve ever reached for an over-the-counter decongestant in the past couple of decades, there’s a good chance it contained phenylephrine as its primary active ingredient. But here’s the catch: Phenylephrine doesn’t work any better than a placebo. So, why is it still available for sale? Vox’s Phil Edwards delves into this perplexing issue in a recent video, shedding light on the complex history behind the FDA’s regulation of over-the-counter medicines. This investigation highlights the need for a reevaluation of regulations governing over-the-counter drugs and underscores the importance of informed consumer choices in the realm of self-medication.

Today’s Hottest Deals: Save Big on Kluster STEM Magnet Game, Right Angle USB-C Cables, 1843Wh Power Station, Harry Potter Wants, and MORE!

For today’s edition of “Deal of the Day,” here are some of the best deals we stumbled on while browsing the web this morning! Please note that Geeks are Sexy might get a small commission from qualifying purchases done through our posts (as an Amazon associate or a member of other affiliate programs. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.)

Kluster Fun STEM Table Top Magnet Game$25.00 $20.00

Azul Board Game – Strategic Tile-Placement Game$39.99 $19.19

Splendor Strategy Board Game$44.99 $21.59

2-PACK: Right Angle USB C Charger Cable (100W, 6FT)$14.99 $8.99

EBL Portable Power Station (2400W, 1843.2Wh) – Can power a typical desktop PC for around 6 hours! – $1399.00 $1049 (Clip Coupon at the Link!)

Google Nest WiFi Pro Mesh Routers – (3-PACK)$399.99 $299.99

Microsoft Office Professional 2021 for Windows: Lifetime License$219.99 $32.97
Microsoft Office Home & Business for Mac 2021: Lifetime License$219.99 $32.97

Harry Potter 12-inch Spellbinding Harry Potter Magic Wand$14.99 $11.99
Harry Potter 12-inch Spellbinding Hermione Granger Magic Wand$15.99 $11.99

Black+Decker Deluxe Vacuum Sealer with 50 Bags$50 $24.99

How a disgruntled scientist looking to prove his food wasn’t fresh discovered radioactive tracers and won a Nobel Prize 80 years ago

George De Hevesy working in his lab at Stockholm University in 1944. Keystone Features/Hulton Archive via Getty Images

Artemis Spyrou, Michigan State University; Katharina Domnanich, Michigan State University, and Sean Liddick, Michigan State University

Each October, the Nobel Prizes celebrate a handful of groundbreaking scientific achievements. And while many of the awarded discoveries revolutionize the field of science, some originate in unconventional places. For George de Hevesy, the 1943 Nobel Laureate in chemistry who discovered radioactive tracers, that place was a boarding house cafeteria in Manchester, U.K., in 1911.

A black and white headshot of a young man with a mustache wearing a suit.
Hungarian chemist George de Hevesy. Magnus Manske

De Hevesey had the sneaking suspicion that the staff of the boarding house cafeteria where he ate at every day was reusing leftovers from the dinner plates – each day’s soup seemed to contain all of the prior day’s ingredients. So he came up with a plan to test his theory.

At the time, de Hevesy was working with radioactive material. He sprinkled a small amount of radioactive material in his leftover meat. A few days later, he took an electroscope with him to the kitchen and measured the radioactivity in the prepared food.

His landlady, who was to blame for the recycled food, exclaimed “this is magic” when de Hevesy showed her his results, but really, it was just the first successful radioactive tracer experiment.

We are a team of chemists and physicists who work at the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams, located at Michigan State University. De Hevesy’s early research in the field has revolutionized the way that modern scientists like us use radioactive material, and it has led to a variety of scientific and medical advances.

The nuisance of lead

A year before conducting his recycled ingredients experiment, Hungary-born de Hevesy had traveled to the U.K. to start work with nuclear scientist Ernest Rutherford, who’d won a Nobel Prize just two years prior.

Rutherford was at the time working with a radioactive substance called radium D, a valuable byproduct of radium because of its long half-life (22 years). However, Rutherford couldn’t use his radium D sample, as it had large amounts of lead mixed in.

When de Hevesy arrived, Rutherford asked him to separate the radium D from the nuisance lead. The nuisance lead was made up of a combination of stable isotopes of lead (Pb). Each isotope had the same number of protons (82 for lead), but a different number of neutrons.

De Hevesy worked on separating the radium D from the natural lead using chemical separation techniques for almost two years, with no success. The reason for his failure was that, unknown to anyone at the time, radium D was actually a different form of lead – namely the radioactive isotope, or radioisotope Pb-210.

Nevertheless, de Hevesy’s failure led to an even bigger discovery. The creative scientist figured out that if he could not separate radium D from natural lead, he could use it as a tracer of lead.

Radioactive isotopes, like Pb-210, are unstable isotopes, which means that over time they will transform into a different element. During this transformation, called radioactive decay, they typically release particles or light, which can be detected as radioactivity.

Through radioactivity, an unstable isotope can turn from one element to another.

This radioactivity acts as a signature indicating the presence of the radioactive isotope. This critical property of radioisotopes allows them to be used as tracers.

Radium D as a tracer

A tracer is a substance that stands out in a crowd of similar material because it has unique qualities that make it easy to track.

For example, if you have a group of kindergartners going on a field trip and one of them is wearing a smartwatch, you can tell if the group went to the playground by tracking the GPS signal on the smartwatch. In de Hevesy’s case, the kindergartners were the lead atoms, the smart watch was radium D, and the GPS signal was the emitted radioactivity.

In the 1910s, the Vienna Institute of Radium Research had a larger collection of radium and its byproducts than any other institution. To continue his experiments with radium D, de Hevesy moved to Vienna in 1912.

He collaborated with Fritz Paneth, who had also attempted the impossible task of separating radium D from lead without success. The two scientists “spiked” samples of different chemical compounds with small amounts of a radioactive tracer. This way they could study chemical processes by tracking the movement of the radioactivity across different chemical reactions

De Hevesy continued his work studying chemical processes using different isotopic markers for many years. He even was the first to introduce nonradioactive tracers. One nonradioactive tracer he studied was a heavier isotope of hydrogen, called deuterium. Deuterium is 10,000 times less abundant than common hydrogen, but is roughly twice as heavy, which makes it easier to separate the two.

De Hevesy and his co-author used deuterium to track water in their bodies. In their investigations, they took turns ingesting samples and measuring the deuterium in their urine to study the elimination of water from the human body.

De Hevesy was awarded the 1943 Nobel Prize in chemistry “for his work on the use of isotopes as tracers in the study of chemical processes.”

Radioactive tracers today

More than a century after de Hevesy’s experiments, many fields now routinely use radioactive tracers, from medicine to materials science and biology.

These tracers can monitor the progression of disease in medical procedures, the uptake of nutrients in plant biology, the age and flow of water in aquifers and the measurement of wear and corrosion of materials, among other applications. Radioisotopes allow researchers to follow the paths of nutrients and drugs in living systems without invasively cutting the tissue.

Four brain scans, two in contrasted colors with the background shown as white and the brain as gray, two with the background shown as black and the brain shown either as gray or orange.
Radioactive tracers, seen in the top left photo as a white spot and indicated by an arrow in the top right, are often used today in brain scans. mr. suphachai praserdumrongchai/iStock via Getty Images

In modern research, scientists focus on producing new isotopes and on developing procedures to use radioactive tracers more efficiently. The Facility for Rare Isotope Beams, or FRIB, where the three of us work, has a program dedicated to the production and harvesting of unique radioisotopes. These radioisotopes are then used in medical and other applications.

FRIB produces radioactive beams for its basic science program. In the production process, a large number of unused isotopes are collected in a tank of water, where they can be later isolated and studied.

Two scientists, a woman wearing a white shirt and a man wearing a dark blue shirt, squat on the concrete ground in a laboartory with lots of machinery and shelves, and a green lit ceiling.
Scientists Greg Severin and Katharina Domnanich at the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams. Facility for Rare Isotope Beams.

One recent study involved the isolation of the radioisotope Zn-62 from the irradiated water. This was a challenging task considering there were 100 quadrillion times more water molecules than Zn-62 atoms. Zn-62 is an important radioactive tracer utilized to follow the metabolism of zinc in plants and in nuclear medicine.

Eighty years ago, de Hevesy managed to take a dead-end separation project and turn it into a discovery that created a new scientific field. Radioactive tracers have already changed human lives in so many ways. Nevertheless, scientists are continuing to develop new radioactive tracers and find innovative ways to use them.The Conversation

Artemis Spyrou, Professor of Nuclear Physics, Michigan State University; Katharina Domnanich, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Michigan State University, and Sean Liddick, Associate Professor of Chemistry, Michigan State University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.