Archive for category science
Eclipse during the Winter Solstice, 2010
Unfortunately, in Indiana we had serious winter cloud cover last night/this morning, so I’m only able to see it via the magic of YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vw960Bmc8uY
It’s not a really big deal, but it is rare: An eclipse during the solstice!
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Wolfram Alpha is really AMAZING.
Posted by will in ideas, science, technology on 2010/01/09
If you haven’t seen Wolfram Alpha, you’re missing out. It’s not just a search engine — is answers simple questions with an amazing array of analytics and diagrams and graphs and history and statistics and more. You can see trends, explore patterns, drilling into many layers of detail. Pick a subject, if there’s information to be had, Wolfram Alpha can help you dive in:
Want some eclipse info?
previous eclipse
solar eclipse
lunar eclipseHow about some weather:
evansville weather in 1976
(differentiates rain and snow for short term, bunches them together as ‘precipitation’ for longer term)
precipitation in evanston il in january 1968
climate in bostonHealth info:
male, 5’9″, 155lbs, body mass index
2 eggs with apple juiceSome investment info:
apple microsoft googleWas the name “Wanda” ever more popular than “Edna”?:
wanda, edna, beulah
karen, faith, madisonIf you had 20/50 vision…
20/50 visionGot music?
D major 7th chord <= click ‘play chord’!Crossword fanatic?
pu__l_
anagram roster
Sheesh, this is amazing!
So all this paranoia about global warming…?
First note — “all” in the above title is just a colloquialism, as in “all this nonsense”.
So it turns out that the scientists, you know, the folks who published all the alarming hoo-hah about global warming? Well, they selected which data to include in (and exclude from) their study, which makes the scientificity very suspect.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/12/01/EDV01ASHN5.DTL
Note that the SFGATE article only shows that, like the rest of us, even high-caliber scientists can have their own agenda and can fall prey to picking-and-choosing the data that support their pet causes. This is called confirmation bias, when we try to figure that we’re already right, instead of trying to find out what the actual data is telling us.
Second Note — This article does not mean that global warming is a fraud. Likely? Possible? Probable? Maybe, but not conclusive. Don’t fall into the trap of swinging the blindness pendulum to the other side of the argument.
Just because the little boy cried wolf… it doesn’t mean there isn’t a wolf.
Third note — where’s the hue and cry about defrauding the public? It’s not there! Could big-lobbying-dollars have anything to do with it? (Just because I’m paranoid, doesn’t mean they aren’t out to get me…)
For a much more reasonable take on Global Warming, whether it’s true or not, check out Greg Cravens’s “How It All Ends” video at Youtube.com (Greg Cravens talks about “Confirmation Bias” in chapter 3 of his book).
Perseid Meteors, August 2009
In the middle of August — every year — Earth passes through a swath of crunchy gunk left behind by comet Swift-Tuttle. Comets have orbits, planets have orbits, and sometimes these orbits overlap… just as long as they’re not at the same place at the same time then there’s no big-time collision. But these comets leave bits of rock and ice in their wake, and when our planet later goes through that spot, we get lots of small-time collisions instead… in the form of meteors. Little particles burn up in the atmosphere (meteors); larger chunks make it to the ground (meteroites).
Comet Swift-Tuttle made a re-appearance in 1992, refreshing its orbital path with lots of fresh new grit for the Earth to sweep up on its next pass. My nephew came to visit us in August shortly after that, and we hopped in the pickup truck and headed out to a remote area with no city lights — and the show was spectacular! (The “Astronomy Picture of the Day” here is a time-lapse of a night in August 2009, but that’s a good representation of how I remember that night on the pickup truck in the early 1990′s…)
There were from three to five at once, brilliant lines of burning rock, lighting up the night sky. It was eerie how full the sky was of these glowing bits of shrapnel from space.
Well, for 2009, I had early-morning commitments on Thursday August 13 and Friday August 14, so I wasn’t able to stay up as late as I’d like to have, to see the meteors (that’d be around 2-3am for optimal activity).
Zut alors!
But many other folks did, and here are some captured by the fine folks over at Flickr.com.
(Also be sure to check out Stellarium — it’s been around quite a while and it’s really an awesome desktop astronomy program!)
Excellent Eclipse for Karen’s Birthday
For me, here in the American midwest, it’s July 21 at 8pm. This means it’s already tomorrow everywhere from Greenwich UK to Japan. In fact, the big solar eclipse of 2009 has already begun!

The animated image you see here is a great representation of where the moon’s shadow is (and was, and will be) during this eclipse.
For more specifics, check out the original web page at http://www.eclipse.org.uk/eclipse/0412009/.
Better Explained . com
Posted by will in ideas, science, technology on 2009/06/13
I just discovered BetterExplained.com, the brainchild of Kalid Azad. It’s great! Kalid writes clear, thorough explanations of all kinds of ideas from simple stuff to complicated stuff. Math, computers, marketing, communication and more.
Go have a look!
15 Beautiful Microscopic Images from Inside the Human Body
Go get the kids! This is some great discussion material with the munchkins…
What’s a taste bud look like? What is it inside your ear that enables you to hear? Show me a six-day-old embryo. What does a blood clot look like up close? Looking for a great reason to brush your teeth thoroughly?
The folks over at Environmental Graffiti have a wonderful collection of close-ups of… well, your innards and mine.
Images include blood cells, healthy and cancerous lungs, intestines of course, and several sensory organs.
Check out 15 Beautiful Microscopic Images from Inside the Human Body.
The Hype Factor: Swine Flu vs. Tuberculosis
Hans Rosling does it again — starting with raw data he paints a very clear picture! This time it’s how news can be just plain hype.
If you’re not familiar with Hans Rosling, he’s the guy who gave the No more boring data talk. Using animation he shows multiple dimensions of data clearly, concisely and convincingly. Â Â
The truth is out there!
Looks like Area 51 has finally been declassified. (E.T. is just hiding with Elvis.)
Astronomy buffs — check out STELLARIUM!
I’ve finally found an astronomy program that doesn’t suck and it’s called “Stellarium”:
- Wonderful interface, great appearance — great for teaching astronomy to kids
- You can turn the atmosphere, ground and haze/fog on or off
- Stellarium shows (or hides) constellation lines, regions and artwork, for Chinese, Egyptian, Western cultures and more
- Display what the equatorial-mount telescope sees, or use azimuth view for the pedestrian perspective from your location
- Click for info on any object; wheel mouse zooms in and out; lots of keyboard shortcuts to track items
- Easily simulate a meteor shower
- Lots, lots more…
- Stellarium is free (and hosted at sourceforge)
