您现在的位置: 首页 > 英语听力 > 媒体资讯 > 60秒科学 > 正文

60秒科学:氟化物保护牙齿的不解之谜

时间:2010-12-31 10:34:06 来源:scientificamerican 编辑:sunny  每天三分钟英语轻松学

| 收藏

评论  打印 字号: | |  

Spectroscopic analysis finds that the fluoridated layer thought to protect teeth is probably too thin to be responsible for fluoride's effects. Karen Hopkin reports

人们通常认为,牙齿的氟化层有护牙的作用,研究发现,这种保护是有限的。

Beauty is only skin deep. And the beauty of shiny white teeth is even less deep. Because a new study shows that fluoride forms a thinner protective shield than experts thought it did. The results appear in the surface science journal Langmuir. [Frank Müller et al., "Elemental Depth Profiling of Fluoridated Hydroxyapatite: Saving Your Dentition by the Skin of Your Teeth?"]

American consumers spend more than $50 billion a year fighting cavities. When we realized that fluoride could help, we put it in our drinking water, our toothpaste and our mouthwash. But how does fluoride work its magic? Many figured that fluoride chemically reacts with the main mineral in enamel to form a thick, decay-resistant veneer. But the latest research kicks that idea in the teeth.

Scientists in Germany used x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to get a detailed image of the surface of a treated tooth. And they found that the protective covering is actually only 6 nanometers thick. That’s about a fifteen-thousandth as thick as a sheet of paper. And a layer that skimpy would likely be worn away by ordinary chewing.

How fluoride keeps the tooth fairy away is a mystery that researchers are still working to unravel. In the meantime, we may not know how it works, but we know that it works. So keep brushing.

—Karen Hopkin

收藏

相关热词搜索: 60秒科学

上一篇:原汁原味商务英语播客 第17课:会议中表达意见

下一篇:2011年四级早准备之四级听力同音近音多义词

您可能还感兴趣的文章

60秒科学:Despite Climategate, IPPC Mostly Und
Despite Climategate, IPPC Mostly Underestimates Climate ChangeSpeaking at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, James

时间:2010-02-25 编辑:

60秒科学:Making Music for Monkey Minds
Making Music for Monkey MindsA study in the journal Biology Letters finds that music based on monkey's own calls has similar effects on them that human music h

时间:2009-09-06 编辑:

60秒科学:Genetic Link For Perfect Pitch?
We might think perfect pitch is an innate talent. Well, a study in the American Journal of Human Genetics is providing some evidence for that.Perfect pitch, ak

时间:2009-07-05 编辑:

60秒科学:让智能手机变成间谍工具的软件
听力原文Used to be if spies wanted to eavesdrop, they planted a bug. These days, it's much easier. Because we all carry potential bugs in our pockets—smart ph

时间:2011-11-10 编辑:

最新文章

无觅相关文章插件,快速提升流量