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Clara Lazen, Ten-Year-Old Fifth Grader, Discovers New Molecule (VIDEO)

First Posted: 02/ 3/2012 7:59 am Updated: 02/ 3/2012 11:32 am

Now that Clara Lazen of Kansas City, Mo. has been published in a major chemistry journal, she can set her sights on a new goal: graduating elementary school. How did she do it? The 10-year-old was experimenting with a molecule-building toy during a class assignment when she stumbled upon an unusual-looking molecule. Her intrigued teacher, Kenneth Boehr, photographed it and sent it to his college buddy Robert Zoellner, a chemistry professor at Humboldt State University in California. Zoellner found that the simple but specific chemical had never been seen before. He published a paper, and Clara and Boehr were listed as co-authors. Reports vary on how the discovery actually went down next. The university's statement said she "randomly arranged" the toy atoms. But in the video above Clara seems to say that her design was deliberate, that the pieces "fit more together and ... look better - all the holes have to be filled in for it to be stable." Either way, Clara's in rare company with a major publication at age 10, and if a lab can manage to synthesize Clara's chemical, it might even prove useful. Two forms of the molecule "may be of interest as high-energy materials," wrote Zoellner in the paper, which was published in the January edition of Computational and Theoretical Chemistry. The university's statement notes:
If a synthetic chemist succeeded at creating the molecule - dubbed tetranitratoxycarbon for short - it could store energy, create a large explosion, or do something in between, Zoellner says: “Who knows?"
The unusual situation isn't lost on Zoellner, who now lists the paper at the top of his sample publications and deadpanned to a local Fox affiliate that "I have never partnered with a middle school student ... before." But Clara doesn't seem fazed by all the press, noting dreamily that "I could sell this to the military for money."
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Now that Clara Lazen of Kansas City, Mo. has been published in a major chemistry journal, she can set her sights on a new goal: graduating elementary school. How did she do it? The 10-year-old was ...
Now that Clara Lazen of Kansas City, Mo. has been published in a major chemistry journal, she can set her sights on a new goal: graduating elementary school. How did she do it? The 10-year-old was ...
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04:40 PM on 02/07/2012
I wonder if they even know how to make that molecule into a real chemical. I used to putz around with those thingys when I was a kid and made some real doozies like that. I was born ahead of my time LOL.
03:42 PM on 02/06/2012
It probably will sound like I'm joking, or lying, but in the 1950s, in the third grade, my teacher was explaining magnetism....I asked whether the north and south poles might be particles....what physicists came to call "magnetic monopoles". I remember the teacher and everyone laughing at me.
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VPutin
Signal in the sky
03:06 PM on 02/08/2012
No ones laughing now are they..considering the south will be north soon and north will be south.
08:51 PM on 04/06/2012
The public education system is what we're laughing at now...
06:39 AM on 02/06/2012
yes......I'm not smarter than fifth grader
02:06 AM on 02/06/2012
"I could sell this to the military for money." well, that ll work out well i am sure. pffff
10:27 PM on 02/07/2012
Why did you dislike my post, I was agreeing with you? Or was it Huffpost that culled my comment?
07:27 AM on 02/08/2012
I don't even know I can dislike a post.... =_=
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Brian Berneker
I have an opinion and I'm not afraid to state it!
09:44 AM on 02/05/2012
Not to steal her fire, but it seems the skills she applied here were spatial observation and hand-eye coordination, not really intellectual. While I hope this spurns her on to create more cool things she can "sell to the military" I don't think this is any definitive sign of genius.

Actually I'm surprised that this configuration hadn't been discovered before. I've written software that could easily calculate permutations on things like this, and it would generate thousands of configurations... I guess it all comes down to application!
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11:10 AM on 02/05/2012
??? so like why do ant colonies beat humans and computers in the travelling salesman problem? theyre so stupid.

some problems are harder if you over think them. compare a dog to a mouse in detour problems. or whatever.

http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2011/11/02/1115898108

http://fold.it/portal/

the story also demonstrates the power of 3D representations. the post Gutenberg 2D universe locks in a certain way of thinking.
05:36 PM on 02/05/2012
what's surprising is your fatuous disregard and dismissiveness of what what can only be described as a child prodigy. I invite you to download Fold It, a molecular game that makes it possible for the general population to help build and create molecules to fight disease. I guarantee that you will start stumbling on module 3, if not 1 or 2. To then casually tell us that it's "just spacial ability," is like saying Einstein is "just good at calculus," or that John Stuart Mill simply "had a determined father," which is why he could speak and write ancient Greek and Latin at 6. What's not surprising is the international science community respecting the creation and recognition (these are balls of wood, the teacher could have just tossed it if he wasn't looking or interested) of new molecules. Sure, the gal might have found it by "random" selection, but she still apparently followed principles of spacial stability and balance. If it was so easy, I'm sure many adults would be boasting about their kid's random discoveries. Rather than figure out why we should not be honoring scientists and discoverers in general, how about being blown away by the mysteries of science, in which a five year old creates molecules that will help us to harness the atom (through high energy control), and explosive power (through the molecular grid she has created/discovered)?
02:09 PM on 02/07/2012
Sorry man, I think she just put it together because it looked cool and "all the holes had to be filled". Stumbled onto a new atom by being good at playing with blocks is what is amazing to me...
10:51 PM on 02/04/2012
The nitrogen bonds in the Clara molecule are under strain. The molecule will likely be unstable. But, there are other explosives that are easier to make and probably easier to handle. If the Clara molecule has value it will not be as an explosive. Being symmetrical with unpaired electrons on the outer perimeter it will probably be an oily liquid. The Clara molecule has an excess of oxygen and can act as an oxidizer. If it can be made stable enough it could be a good rocket propellent.
09:14 AM on 02/05/2012
I think it's Adamantium! Now we can build a Wolverine to call our very own!
07:17 AM on 02/07/2012
Not without that healing mutation you won't.
09:07 PM on 02/04/2012
Clara Lazen, you are one of many reasons why older folks like me

and others know you young ones are more qualified than we were

to save our planet. Kudos to you.
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jeremyemilio
My micro-bio is NOT empty
04:26 PM on 02/05/2012
Well... except for the whole "Maybe I can sell it to the military to blow stuff up" thing...
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piceaglauca
The picture says it all....
08:48 PM on 02/04/2012
It's fantastic for this little girl and it is even more fantastic for the school system which at times has trouble existing within its criticism. The opportunities given by teachers such as Mr. Boehr to these kids to explore and develop their minds has proven a point that the educational system today has provided an opportunity for this little girl to succeed and to benefit others.
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maternatura
Conservative Liberal and recovering republican
08:30 PM on 02/04/2012
Brilliant! I love stories like this.
09:56 PM on 03/05/2012
me too! love these kind of stories. i am so inspired by Clara and want to do something just like her (i am an 11 yr old, too). i just printed this article and am going to show it to my science teacher. i told her and the class about it, but i don't think she truly believed me...but now she will! she said she has to see the article to see if its true.
Anyway, GREAT WORK CLARA! i am truly in awe and i am inspired by you! Go Clara! :D
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maternatura
Conservative Liberal and recovering republican
11:37 PM on 03/05/2012
Good for you, Swimmer! Keep dreaming, exploring, discovering and stay curious. Have a great life.
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444ovthedirt
Embedded retorter and Fnord correspondent.
03:54 PM on 02/04/2012
This student really had no idea what she was doing. Nor did the teacher ,which is why he passed it off to a third party at some california university where they haven't even found out if they can synthesize this particular molecular model yet.

"Deductive Reasoning" also known as the Trivium and Quadrivium­.

http://www­.triviumed­ucation.co­m/

Check it out it can be helpful in defending oneself against logical fallacies like those presented in this article.
10:08 PM on 02/04/2012
The teacher at least recognized "something." He may not have known what it was, but if he were totally lacking knowledge he never would have passed it on.
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444ovthedirt
Embedded retorter and Fnord correspondent.
11:06 PM on 02/04/2012
That is almost as vague and meaningless as the article itself. Is there some kind of competition going on here I am not privy to?

Who can make the most inane and spurious semantic acrobatic routines?

They do not know what kinds of uses this non-existent molecule may or may not have because it doesn't exist.

They do not even know if it can even be synthesized to even experiment with it.

He saw a kid put pieces of a model together. She asked if it was a real molecule.
He didn't know ,he asked his friend, His friend doesn't really know either.

Its pretty self explanatory.

An over hyped non story.

Perhaps next time they could focus on a real unsung genius's like
Nikola Tesla, Nathan Stubblefield, or John Bedini.

That would be real reporting.
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jimspy
Quod quae operibus sufficit.
01:34 PM on 02/05/2012
Party pooper.
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444ovthedirt
Embedded retorter and Fnord correspondent.
01:55 PM on 02/05/2012
If being capable of logical deduction makes me a party pooper. Yes. Yes I am a party pooper.

And I'm proud to do and be so.

Im sick of watching people be so lazy minded.
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Rokgoo
looking for the right side of the left
03:41 PM on 02/04/2012
Wow, another "War-Willing-Genius", amazing!
02:39 PM on 02/07/2012
Stamp out the "genius" part and I'll agree to your post, this girl was playing with blocks and had no idea what she had "created" just that it looked different from other toys she had seen before. I'll bet she could not definitively explain the difference between a covalent bond and a corn dog...

2 sad things come to me from this story, we are raising greed driven war mongers, and the public is so desperate for a silver bullet that they see them under every rock that get turned over by a school kid who tripped in the play ground.
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Rokgoo
looking for the right side of the left
03:01 PM on 02/07/2012
meant sarcastic.
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Vapula
Failure is not an option
03:26 PM on 02/04/2012
Create a large explosion? I think we have enough things that can do that and we don't need or want anymore.
03:44 PM on 02/04/2012
MIT will be unhappy when it proofs to be a medicine against cancer
05:59 AM on 02/05/2012
Only God knows that is my best wish for this to turn out to be. :)
03:11 PM on 02/05/2012
Of course it could turn out to be a power source equivalent to nuclear fusion without the radiation.
That would be something.
08:35 PM on 02/07/2012
You have to make it first... that will take more energy than you'll get from it as a power source.
03:15 PM on 02/04/2012
Has this young 10-yr-old genius gotten her notification from M.I.T. yet offering her a scholarship, when she graduates from Middle School?
03:04 PM on 02/04/2012
Gee.....and to think, when I was 10 years old.....I found a bright yellow frog, with black spots. Molecues were things that were only imagined back then. lol The world needs more kids like her....to be sure.
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outloud
Illegitimi non carborundum
03:00 PM on 02/04/2012
The way I see it....she's not a scientist so much as she is an artist.

She put together a shape with color....she wasn't thinking about chemicals. That's why she asked her teacher if it was real.

Certainly not trying to discredit her creativity but just think the cart got put before the horse---so to speak.
02:24 AM on 02/05/2012
".she'­s not a scientist so much as she is an artist."

Why do you think that is a distinction?
08:37 PM on 02/07/2012
Science and art share space, but aren't the same thing. See if you can spot the difference:

systematic knowledge of the physical or material world gained through observation and experimentation

the quality, production, expression, or realm, according to aesthetic principles, of what is beautiful, appealing, or of more than ordinary significance
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StephenJK
All your consciousness are belong to us
06:26 AM on 02/05/2012
God is more of an artist than a scientist, too. So, the girl is in good company.
08:38 PM on 02/07/2012
How about we leave imaginary friends and fairy stories out of this.