'Sleeping on' puzzle just might solve it

Published: Thursday, Nov. 11 2004 12:00 a.m. MST

Question: Tease your brain with this one: What one word does the following sequence represent? H-I-J-K-L-M-N-O Clue: Think out of the box. Clue 2: A good way to think out of the box is to sleep on a problem.

Answer: That's exactly how a male subject working with sleep researcher William Dement approached it, though not intentionally, says Andrea Rock in "The Mind at Night." Before falling asleep, he believed he had solved the problem with the word "alphabet." Then during the night, he had dreams of heavy rain, sailing and scuba diving — all water dreams. Water? Oh, yeah, water! The liquid familiarly known as H2O. And that unlocked the puzzle.

As Harvard researcher Robert Stickgold has said, in dreams we operate without the anchors of logic and episodic memory, and without the brain chemicals needed for focusing attention. In other words, we brainstorm, thinking outside the box of waking mental limits. And asleep the subject's mind just "wandered" to H2O, or H to O!

Question: Why are so many desert birds black, when everyone knows black absorbs more of the sun's energy than white.

Answer: Ornithologists puzzled over this for a long time, until experiments were done actually measuring skin temperatures under white and black plumage, says Pennsylvania State University's Craig Bohren, author of "Clouds in a Glass of Beer."

Surprisingly, the dark birds had cooler skins! It turns out the incident solar radiation is absorbed in the outer layers of the black plumage, and these layers are insulated from the underlying skin. The white plumage does indeed reflect a fair amount of solar radiation, but much of this is then transmitted to the underlying skin.

To test this out, Bohren placed thermometers in direct sunshine, under either a thin layer of black cloth or a white towel. The black cloths did get hotter on the surface, but the temperature underneath stayed lower by about 0.5 degrees Celsius.

Question: A tourist purchases a car in England and ships it home to the United States. He loves the car but finds it getting more like 30 miles per gallon on the open road rather than its sticker-advertised 35 miles per gallon. What's wrong with the vehicle?

Answer: It's more the owner's math that could use the tuneup, since he's forgetting that in the United Kingdom a gallon is about 4.5 liters whereas in the United States it's about 3.8 liters, say David Halliday et al. in "Fundamentals of Physics, 6th Edition." Thus for a 900-mile trip in the U.S. the motorist might need approximately 30 gallons of gas compared to only 25.3 gallons purchased in the U.K.

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