Wednesday November 08, 2006
Transit of Mercury
Astronomy is exciting when things pass in front of other things. It can teach us a lot, like when galaxies pass in front of other things in deep space, which can cause a phenomenon called
gravitational lensing. Or, it can just look really swell and give us a window into how everything is moving around out there, as in eclipses.
Today, witness a fairly rare event: a transit of Mercury across the face of the sun. You can get more information and witness a broadcast online at the
Exploratorium. The transit begins about 2:15pm Eastern Time. Hopefully the webcast will be worthwhile: it's a reduced size image suitable for internet broadcast, of something already small and sort of fuzzy if you're not looking closely.
This is similar to a solar eclipse in that we'll see one object passing between us and the sun, manifesting in a shadow of that object. The difference is that while the angular size of the moon is just about that of the sun from Earth perspective, resulting in occasional total eclipses, Mercury appears much, much smaller. Like, this small (image from Exploratorium site):

I was fortunate to see the
1999 transit live through a solar telescope. But that time, Mercury just clipped the edge of the solar face. This time it will catch more of the disk from where I'm at, and will take around five hours. On the east coast, the sun will set before the transit is finished.
Posted by jkwilson
( Nov 08 2006, 10:34:19 AM EST )
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Monday October 30, 2006
Little chocolate donuts
My next exercise as chemistry reference librarian: look up all the dubious compounds contained in the donuts I just ate. (Ironically and idealistically known as
Mrs. Freshley's Chocolate Mini-Donuts, purchased out of a vending machine. The good news is that they had an expiration date.) My short-term goal is to use library resources to understand the purpose of each of the mystery ingredients. My long-term goal is to scare myself into never being tempted to eat these things again:
sodium acid pyrophosphate
sodium aluminum phosphate
monocalcium phosphate
dextrins
guar gum
karaya gum
monoglycerides
sodium stearoyl lactylate
xanthan gum
bees wax
cellulose
enzyme [this is frighteningly vague--I'm not quite sure this counts as full disclosure of ingredients, to be honest]
sodium propionate
potassium sorbate (to preserve freshness)
Posted by jkwilson
( Oct 30 2006, 04:18:13 PM EST )
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2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference
I'll be going to the
2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference, to be held at UNC in January. If you're interested in science blogging and will be in the area, please consider attending. From the site: "This is a free, open and public event for scientists, educators,
students, journalists, bloggers and anyone interested in discussing
science communication, education and literacy on the Web." Have a look at the site for more details.
Should be interesting to meet some others in the area who have actual science blogs, instead of my random science news observations (on topics sometimes decades old).
Posted by jkwilson
( Oct 30 2006, 02:26:56 PM EST )
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Friday October 13, 2006
All nine lives used up
Genetic Savings & Clone is
going out of business.
I discussed this
a while ago: they were in the truly insane business of cloning cats for a steep fee. This was actually a lot of sound and fury, signifying nothing. They only cloned five cats successfully, and sold only two to paying customers. According to the AP story, they simply haven't been able to make the process commercially viable.
Posted by jkwilson
( Oct 13 2006, 11:39:22 AM EDT )
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Monday October 09, 2006
Nemesis!
Highly recommended, as a readable introduction to the process of working through from scientific hypothesis to theory, is Richard Muller's
Nemesis. (By remarkable coincidence it is
available in this library, or it will be, once I turn it in.)
The Nemesis theory is a fun one. Having a look at the graph below will help explain it (from
Rampino MR, The galactic theory of mass extinctions: An update. Celestial Mechanics & Dynamical Astronomy 69 (1-2): 49-58):

What we're seeing here is the number of living species (represented by the rather brutal 'species kill percentage') over time. We see that there are frequent "death spikes", where large numbers of species perish all at once. It turns out these even happen with some regularity, something like every 26-30 million years, depending on how much you trust the age measurements of the fossils. You can see that the death spikes are often accompanied (especially in more recent times, when they're easier to find) by signs of comet, asteroid, or meteor impacts--leaving behind craters and iridium and kicking up dust ("ejecta").
The fact that the impacts are happening fairly regularly isn't really the subject of debate any more (Muller's book takes you through some of the early discoveries of these impacts). But the cause and exact frequency of the impacts is another matter. Why are we getting bombarded with such regularity? It can't be coincidence.
Muller and his colleagues originally came up with the idea of Nemesis, a theoretical companion star to the sun. When it approaches every 26 million years or so, it wrenches a bunch of comets out of their stable, distant lives in the outer solar system, and sends them hurtling towards the sun, some of which will eventually impact Earth. The book takes you through the development of the hypthosis as he rules out several potential alternate theories, debates evidence with other teams of scientists, and fights to prevent the mass media from completely getting it wrong or embarrassing him. It's a great window into the world of scientific discourse. How are theories developed? How are they disproven? How do teams of experts in different fields effectively work together? What happens when another reputable team has a different theory? How do "nutty" theories gain respect, and how does any theory stand up to scrutiny?
The book was published in 1988, so it's somewhat dated, but the theory itself is still around and depending on what you read, appreciating about the same level of moderate acceptance. It's left with Muller preparing to search for the Nemesis star, and nearly twenty years later it has still never been definitively identified--making it easy to write off the theory. Detractors also usually cite a lack of evidence for the periodicity of the extinctions (despite the graph seen above, the dating isn't entirely accepted), or insufficient proof that Nemesis could have a stable orbit with respect to the sun. The most commonly-studied alternate theory these days is that the solar system actually oscillates up and down with respect to the galactic plane while it orbits around the galactic center, and when it crosses this plane (every 26 million years), the extra mass of dust and gas nearby is enough to perturb some comets. Muller actually considers and dismisses this theory within his book. So, the matter is hardly settled.
Anyway, while it's
obviously not helpful to the theory that no candidate star has been
found, it's not hopeless either--such a star would be very small and
currently is at its furthest from our solar system. So the good news is that if we believe the theory, the "putative death star" (as geologist Eugene Shoemaker referred to it) is a good 10-15 million years away from a return trip.
Posted by jkwilson
( Oct 09 2006, 05:18:39 PM EDT )
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Friday October 06, 2006
2006 IgNobel Prizes
Last night was the Academy Awards...of bizarre research, also known as the IgNobel prizes. I can't possibly add to them with commentary.
So, view the complete list here (servers are overwhelmed this morning). And here are some of the highlights (from Reuters):
-- BIOLOGY - Bart Knols of
Wageningen Agricultural University in the Netherlands, the National
Institute for Medical Research in Tanzania and the International Atomic
Energy Agency in Vienna, Austria and colleague Ruurd de Jong for
showing that the female Anopheles gambiae mosquito, which carries
malaria, is attracted equally to the smell of limburger cheese and to
the smell of human feet.
"We have shown that three different
Anopheles mosquito species prefer to bite different parts of a naked
motionless volunteer and that this behavior is influenced by odors from
those body regions," they wrote in their report, published in the
Lancet medical journal in 1996.
-- ORNITHOLOGY - Ivan Schwab of
the University of California Davis, and the late Philip R.A. May of the
University of California Los Angeles, for explaining why woodpeckers do
not get headaches.
-- NUTRITION - Wasmia Al-Houty of Kuwait
University and Faten Al-Mussalam of the Kuwait Environment Public
Authority, for showing that dung beetles are finicky eaters.
--
PEACE - Howard Stapleton of Merthyr Tydfil, Wales, for inventing a
teenager repellent -- a device that makes a high-pitched noise that is
annoying to teenagers but inaudible to most adults; and for later using
the technology to make cellphone ringtones that teenagers can hear but
not their teachers.
-- ACOUSTICS - D. Lynn Halpern, Randolph
Blake and James Hillenbrand of Chicago's Northwestern University for a
1986 experiment aimed at discovering why the sound of fingernails
scraping on a blackboard is so irritating.
-- MEDICINE - Francis
Fesmire of the University of Tennessee College of Medicine and the team
of Majed Odeh, Harry Bassan and Arie Oliven of Bnai Zion Medical Center
in Haifa, Israel who both published studies entitled "Termination of
Intractable Hiccups with Digital Rectal Massage."
-- MATHEMATICS
- Nic Svenson and Piers Barnes of the Australian Commonwealth
Scientific and Research Organization, for calculating the number of
shots a photographer must take to almost ensure that nobody in a group
photo will have their eyes closed.
Posted by jkwilson
( Oct 06 2006, 09:23:13 AM EDT )
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Thursday September 28, 2006
Peer-reviewed journals: only for l33t researchers?
From a
discussion of the traditional peer-review process in scientific journals. The
Public Library of Science is launching an open access journal called
PLoS ONE with a new kind of peer-review model. (
Nature's doing
someting similar.) Instead of painstaking pre-publication review by qualified colleagues and researchers in the field (i.e., peers), they're trying this:
Articles published in the new journal will undergo peer review, but
some of the standard criteria that older journals use to screen out
articles--like "degree of advance" or "interest to a general
reader"--won't be used by PLoS ONE reviewers; all papers of
scientific merit will be posted to the public record...A more public review
process will continue after publication, as readers will be able to
rate, annotate, and comment on papers, and authors can respond to their
comments. The original paper will remain as such, but comments,
revisions, and updates will orbit nearby, an electronic Talmud on every
article of significance.
It's an interesting Web 2.0 approach: just get it online, and let the masses sort it out. Of course, it's not without its drawbacks:
It is easy to believe, in reading the plans for this new publication, that it truly represents "the first step" in a wonderful "revolution" (as the Public Library of Science puts it). But it is worth remembering that gates and gatekeepers serve the important function of keeping out barbarians; it would be regrettable if the world of science journals came to suffer the sort of "trolling" and "flaming" so common today in comments on blogs and Internet discussion boards. It would be unfortunate if the deliberate, measured character of scientific research and discourse were lost to a culture of speed, hype, and quick-hit comments.
Flaming is certainly a concern: ever been to a conference where petty arguments *didn't* break out and go on way too long at some point? And you don't have to spend much time on internet message boards and community sites to get a feel for what happens when you give the wrong people (a) a forum to express their opinions, no matter how banal, and (b) anonymity. Imagine a world where dissertations are published online by freshly doctorated researchers, only to be met with comments like "OMG n00b!!!!1!!"
Posted by jkwilson
( Sep 28 2006, 10:57:23 AM EDT )
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Friday September 15, 2006
Nine Lives Extravaganza
Miss your cat? Get it back!
As near as I can tell, this is for serious, although it's clearly the most insane thing I've seen in a long time...prior to euthanization, you can pay $895 to have
Genetic Savings & Clone Inc. take a biopsy sample and save it in their PetBank for $100 a year. ($1395 for the premium service--extra samples taken and the option to have the procedure done on recently-deceased pets.) Then, for a mere $32,000, they'll clone your cat, delivering you a new kitten with the exact genetic traits of your beloved feline pal. (At present, this service isn't available for dogs.)
Wow. I had no idea such a thing existed, at any price. I won't get into the ethics of cloning (their site makes some effort to do so) but I can't help but feel like they're preying on people's grief. And actually, just grieving people with a lot of extra money on their hands. Not that I want to put any price on a pet, which is often entirely a member of your family. But $32,000 could go a very long ways in the hands of the Humane Society or ASPCA. Speaking of which, they have any number of kittens and cats that you can adopt
today, rather than burning a fortune on a clone. This is exceedingly wasteful extravagance.
Posted by jkwilson
( Sep 15 2006, 11:34:02 AM EDT )
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Friday September 08, 2006
Science prevails
I'm something of a
NOAA National Hurricane Center addict now that I live in hurricane country. I mean, if you crave hurricane danger, it's hardly like living in Florida or even closer to the coast. But I grew up in Montana, where hurricanes are strictly confined to television.
I like to read the forecast discussions in particular when a storm is developing. Not that I follow a lot of the meteorological reasoning, but you can get some details about the storm's progress outside of just the forecasts and warnings. One paragraph today struck me, in discussion about Tropical Storm Florence, which has failed to organize and develop the way that many of the models have predicted. Yet the forecaster is still confident (emphasis mine):
NOTE: LAST TWO VISIBLE SATELLITE IMAGES PRIOR TO SENDING THIS
ADVISORY SUGGESTS THAT THE CLOUD PATTERN IS A LITTLE BETTER
ORGANIZED AND THE CENTER APPEARS TO BE TUCKED INTO THE CONVECTION.
IF THIS TREND TOWARD ORGANIZATION CONTINUES...
SCIENCE WILL HAVE PREVAILED.
This is signed at the end by
Forecaster Avila, whose brief wikipedia page highlights his other forecasting greatest hits. I guess I'm just always surprised when there's any levity in these discussions. The all-caps type (and often, the warnings of impending weather catastrophe) are otherwise so serious...
Posted by jkwilson
( Sep 08 2006, 02:19:55 PM EDT )
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Wednesday August 23, 2006
Orbital dominance!
The planet debate continues at the IAU 26th (or XXVIth for you Romans)
General Assembly. Interesting update today about the status of the
draft proposal
for a definition of a planet, released last week but subject to
discussion and vote before becoming official. In short, all your
effort to create new 12-word mnemonics for remembering the planets has
probably been for naught.
The main problem with the draft was
that the definition was just too inclusive. The liberally small size
requirement could have potentially let several asteroids and Kuiper
Belt Objects (KBOs) into the intentionally exclusive club of
planethood. Instead, the concept of
orbital dominance
has emerged from the conference as a better way to distinguish planets
from everything else in the solar system. If an object is the only
major body in its orbit, that should count for something. This concept
lends weight to the nature of first eight planets, recognizing them as
unique objects. However, it eliminates Pluto. Given that Charon is
significantly close to Pluto in mass, neither is considered dominant.
It also pretty much slams the door on finding any other planets, a
possibility the draft definition made very likely.
So, Pluto, Charon, 2003 UB313, and other distanct KBOs will probably be
banished to dwarf planet status. Astronomers are still discussing
possible names for these objects to separate them from asteroids. The
term "plutons" has already been dismissed. "Pluton" is actually
already a common geological term for igneous rocks (solidified magma).
I like this take on it, from the AP article:
"What were they thinking? The reaction in the geologic community was
rolling of eyes," said Allen F. Glazner, a geologist at the University
of North Carolina. "It would be like botanists trying to distinguish
between trees and shrubs and coming up with the term 'animal.'"
I liked the 12 planet idea, but I think I'm happier with this
definition. The draft doesn't differentiate "major" planets, KBOs, and
asteroids, just lumps them all together in one big happy planet
family. But I like orbital dominance, and using the word
planet to
mean something significant. I'm guessing large, spherical objects in
the Kuiper belt (i.e., Pluto and Friends) will end up being called
Tombaugh Objects as a political way of recognizing Clyde Tombaugh's
discovery of Pluto. Seems nice, given that they're stealing a whole
planet from him.
You also have to feel for the astrology community, who must have been
primed for the 12-planet system. It would have given them ready-made
excuses for thousands of years of mistakes. ("No, see if we'd have
known about Ceres, we could have predicted you'd miss out on that big
promotion!")
Posted by jkwilson
( Aug 23 2006, 05:04:32 PM EDT )
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Wednesday August 16, 2006
Everything you know (about planets) is wrong
Right now the International Astronomical Union (IAU) is convening for their
26th General Assembly
(or the XXVIth for you Romans). Among their tasks is to formally
define the idea of a planet and in turn, decide just how many planets
are in this solar system, anyway.
Today they've
drafted a resolution
which creates not only a definition for planets, but includes a
definition for a new class of object called a "pluton" (including
Pluto, its companion Charon, and the as-yet-unnamed 2003 UB313, an
object similar to Pluto that's probably a bit larger but further
away). Should these definitions be accepted by the mass of eager
astronomers, we'll suddenly have
twelve planets!

Image from
here.
We're due for such a discussion, officially. Modern observational
techniques continue to find new examples to confound the generally
accepted idea of a planet. 2003 UB313 (popularly called "Xena" but the
IAU won't touch that one--anyway it's not "official" yet) is at least
as big as Pluto but has a much more eccentric orbit. And astronomers
regularly find new objects beyond Pluto (an area with a great deal of dust and ice called the Kuiper belt).
Details can be found on the IAU's excellent
question and answer page. But I'll summarize the questions I had.
1. So what's a planet?To
be a planet, an object must satisfy two criteria. First, the object
has to orbit a star. Second, it has to be massive enough such that
it's mostly spherical. (Size and shape are related. If an object has a mass
above 5 x 10^20 kg and diameter greater than 800 km, its own gravity
will tend to form it into a spherical shape in time. This is really
pretty small if you think about it. 800 km is about 500 miles. Pluto,
the currently-accepted smallest planet, has a diameter of about 2300
km.)
2. There were nine. Now twelve? What the...? Where did the extras come from?
I personally thought this was mainly about whether Pluto and 2003 UB313
were going to stay, or get into, the planetary club. But the IAU
proposal makes a point of not only letting them in, but further
recognizing Charon and the largest asteroid, Ceres. Not only that, but
if the proposal gets approved, there are
twelve more candidates for planethood (other plutons and asteroids), pending further observations and refinement of the definition. And there will undoubtedly be other Kuiper belt objects found that will enter the planetary debate.
3. Where do they get off counting Charon? Isn't it a moon?
The IAU considers Pluto and Charon a different breed altogether,
calling them a "double planet" instead of a planet and satellite,
because the center of mass of the system (the "barycenter") is above
Pluto's surface (i.e., in the space between the two). All moons orbit
planets around the center of mass, but for the Earth's Moon and other
large satellites around the outer planets, the barycenter is well below
the planet's surface. (I won't get into a big physics discussion about
orbits and barycenters now, but have a look at the wikipedia definition
here for an explanation and nice animations of the concept.)
Posted by jkwilson
( Aug 16 2006, 09:55:34 AM EDT )
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Wednesday August 02, 2006
Powers of observation
A quick science test from Richard Muller's terrific book
Nemesis (which I'll discuss more soon):
***
He pulled out the large, red-bound Snowbird Conference Proceedings. In it was a map of the eighty-eight known impact craters on the Earth. "You'll notice that most of them are in Europe and North America. Can you guess why?"
I thought of rotations of the Earth, but had no luck in figuring out why impacts would be more likely in the Northern Hemisphere. Walt didn't let me waste time for long. He said, "Because that is where the most geologists live."
***
Posted by jkwilson
( Aug 02 2006, 04:59:20 PM EDT )
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Thursday July 27, 2006
Science is a trail of learning, littered with carcasses of failure
From
Modern Mechanix (endlessly entertaining scans of old magazines), here's a theory that didn't quite have the legs:

(Transcription available at
http://blog.modernmechanix.com/2006/07/26/light-gets-tired-and-turns-red/ )

Yeah, that's a nice little anthropomorphic theory, but no, light doesn't get tired. For an overview of what actually causes redshift, have a look
here.
"I just flew in from the origin of the universe, and...!" ...nevermind.
Posted by jkwilson
( Jul 27 2006, 10:02:24 AM EDT )
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Tuesday July 25, 2006
Albert Einstein disproves the existence of Vulcan
Nowadays debate about the number of planets in
our solar system revolves around arguing about exactly which of the
slightly-larger-than-average icy bodies should be included in the count.
Also, if you talk about the planet Vulcan, it is assumed you are simply a
harmless Star Trek nerd referring to the homeworld of a fictional race of
emotionless humanoids.
Consider a time when neither of those things were true. Consider the 19th
century.
In the 1840s, French astronomer Urbain Jean Joseph Le Verrier began applying
Newtonian dynamics to the problems of planetary orbits. After noticing a
discrepancy between his calculations and the direct observations of Uranus, he
predicted that Uranus was being gravitationally affected by another more
distant planet. He was even able to predict where it was in its orbit
before it was observed. In 1846, Neptune was discovered where foreseen,
lending credence to both Le Verrier and Newton.
In the 1850s, feeling emboldened by his historic prediction, Le Verrier turned
his sights on the other planets. Similar to the perturbations he noticed
in Uranus's orbit, he also found problems with Mercury, the innermost planet in
the solar system. He concluded that there must be another planet even
closer to the sun disturbing Mercury's orbit. He named it Vulcan (after
the Roman God of Fire).
I won't draw it out here. For decades he and others searched for Vulcan
without success. Le Verrier and other astronomers who supported the
Vulcan theory died convinced it would be found.
So what happened? Le Verrier had applied Newtons's laws correctly.
If the theory is correct, the outcome must be predictable, yet the prediction
in this case ultimately failed. Had Newton been wrong about gravitational
laws?
Nah. It just didn't account for everything. Turns out the
inconsistencies between observation and prediction were actually a relativistic
effect:
The advance of Mercury's perihelion was
brilliantly explained by Albert Einstein in November 1915 at his desk in Berlin
-- his general theory of relativity finally exorcised the ghost of Vulcan from the inner solar system. Einstein
presented a new theory of gravitation that conceived of it as a warping of the
fabric of space-time. According to his theory, Mercury should precess slightly
faster than the Newtonian rate -- by 0.1 arcseconds for each orbital revolution
of the planet, or 43 arc-seconds per century. This agreed exactly with the
observed rate. Vulcan became redundant.*
Unfortunately Le Verrier
didn't know about relativity, and spent a good portion of his professional life
trying to work on a problem that demanded its contributions.
*Excerpted from "Vulcan
Chasers" by William Sheehan and Richard Baum, Astronomy, volume 25, issue 12 (December 1997).
Read more of the story there, or the wikipedia article here.
Posted by jkwilson
( Jul 25 2006, 06:40:39 PM EDT )
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Friday July 21, 2006
Look! Do you hear that?
Of all the ways to revive this blog, I‘m going to do it with an internet quiz.
But wait! It's a pretty fascinating one, and like many other entries in this journal, is a vague application of the "madder" sciences.
So there's this new trend in cell-phonery wherein teenagers are using ringtones that take advantage of their aging instructors' deteriorated hearing. They use ultra-high-pitched sounds: they can hear the tones, their teachers can't. (MSNBC article here.)
Of course this works the other way around, too. In fact, this idea was originally applied to disperse teenagers, not give them a way to foil their elders. Here's an example of a theater in the UK where the same sounds that adults are blissfully ignorant about can serve as "youth repellent" to keep unwanted teenagers away.
Use the link below to find out how old your ears are. I'm nearly 30, but am pleased to report that my hearing still rivals a 20-year-old:
Posted by jkwilson
( Jul 21 2006, 12:21:03 PM EDT )
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