Science and Souls (for geeks and spiritual explorers)

Bob Loblaw

Astralnaut
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=tiny-bubbles-explain-puzz


Tiny Bubbles Explain Puzzle about Light from Sound


By Kristin Leutwyler

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Image: Phys. Rev. Lett.86, 4934 (2001)

Sonoluminescence the physical phenomenon by which sound turns into light¿is as mystifying as a magic trick. Despite 70 years of trying, scientists still cannot fully explain how a bubble of air in water focuses acoustic energy a trillion-fold to spit out pico-second bursts of ultraviolet radiation. Initially physicists attributed the flashes to friction. In the late 1980s, though, they came to see that bubbles in a sound wave's path expanded and rapidly collapsed¿heating the gas inside them to temperatures hotter than the sun's surface. This collapse and heat, they determined, created a glowing plasma.

In this week's issue of Physical Review Letters, Gary A. Williams and his colleagues from the University of California at Los Angeles present evidence that lends further support to that theory. The researchers set out to explain earlier observations that the spectra of light from a single bubble lacked an emission line¿for the molecule OH¿seen from multiple bubbles. Because of the discrepancy, some had suggested that different physical mechanisms were at work and that there were, in essence, two kinds of sonoluminescence. But Williams's group proved that isn't the case, creating larger-than-usual single bubbles whose spectra included the missing emission.

Although they don't know why, the researchers say that bubble size alone seems to predict the OH line and suggest that, compared with smaller single bubbles that collapse symmetrically (top right), larger bubbles in multi-bubble systems are unstable (bottom right). The team further fitted the spectra to a black-body radiation curve and showed that it corresponded to plasma at a temperature of about 8,000 degrees Kelvin. "It's a nice connecting together of the underlying physical phenomena," Ken Suslick of the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign told Physical Review Focus. "And the ability to recognize the OH emission line is pretty cool."
 

grokit

well-worn member
Those images are simply incredible, thanks for posting the link.
Click on this one^ peeps! :tup:

The rats needed a direct choice between cocaine and oreos imo, but still quite interesting:
New Study: Oreos Are Just as Addictive as Cocaine
Lab rats in an experiment derived equal pleasure from both.
shutterstock_151592612.jpg

October 17, 2013

While this might not be news to those of us who can't get enough of America's Favorite Cookie, science has now backed up our Oreo addiction. Students at Connecticut College conducted a study recently, and found that the attraction rats feel for Oreo cookies is equally strong as their attraction to cocaine.

The study placed rats inside of the maze (don't all studies do that?), and trained them to associate one side of the maze with either cookies or cocaine, and the other with rice cakes. The students soon found that the rats had "an equally strong association between the pleasure effects of eating Oreos" as they had when they could choose cocaine over rice cakes, essentially proving that the rats were equally motivated by both options (and, like people, not too excited about rice cakes).

It's still unclear whether the correlative aspects of the study have informed the results (namely whether the rats were responding less to a love of cocaine and Oreos as much as they were a distaste to rice cakes), but the concept of the processed food industry providing a snack with the same addictive quality as a hard drug is simultaneously shocking and, to many, expected.

The most curious revelation? One researcher told Grist.org, that the rats, too, would split the Oreo in half and eat the middle first. So there's something to chew on for a while.


http://www.alternet.org/food/new-st...1073898.1R4Y7H&rd=1&src=newsletter911639&t=19
 
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Tweek

Well-Known Member
There are a few corporations with some sort of tie to Hitler...IBM, Siemens, Hugo Boss, Volkswagen, etc, etc...Corporations are evil...don't like to paint them all with the same brush, but whether it's past or present actions, or the way they treat their employees...most corporations suck major ass in my book.

Even the way they are set up...to circumvent responsibility invites bad behaviour and a lack of social accountability.
 

grokit

well-worn member
I love this featured comment on youtube (where it's available full length):

"To summarize the main point for those with ADD: We live in a world in which the phrase "a corporation is a person" means that large businesses have been given the same US Constitutional rights as have been individual human beings. Yet, these businesses engage in psycopathological behaviors that harm humans with impunity because they "externalize" responsibilities. In other words, they want more rights with less responsibility so tax payers can pay for their overhead & clean up their messes"

I especially like the commenter's use of the term, "psycopathological" :dog:

Back to robots, on the other end of the spectrum it's getting a little too real:

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'Bionic man' makes debut at Washington's Air and Space Museum
By Lacey Johnson

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A first-ever walking, talking "bionic man" built entirely out of synthetic body parts made his Washington debut on Thursday.

The robot with a human face unveiled at the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum was built by London's Shadow Robot Co to showcase medical breakthroughs in bionic body parts and artificial organs.

"This is not a gimmick. This is a real science development," museum director John Dailey said.

The 6-foot-tall (1.83 meter), 170-pound (77-kg) robot is the subject of a one-hour Smithsonian Channel documentary, "The Incredible Bionic Man," airing on Sunday.

A "bionic man" was the material of science fiction in the 1970s when the television show "The Six Million Dollar Man" showed the adventures of a character named Steve Austin, a former astronaut whose body was rebuilt using synthetic parts after he nearly died.

The robot on display at the museum cost $1 million and was made from 28 artificial body parts on loan from biomedical innovators. They include a pancreas, lungs, spleen and circulatory system, with most of the parts early prototypes.

"The whole idea of the project is to get together all of the spare parts that already exist for the human body today - one piece. If you did that, what would it look like?" said Bertolt Meyer, a social psychologist from the University of Zurich in Switzerland and host of the documentary.

The robot was modeled after Meyer, who was born without a hand and relies on an artificial limb. He showed off the bionic man by having it take a few clumsy steps and by running artificial blood through its see-through circulatory system.

"It, kind of, looks lifelike. Kind of creepy," said Paul Arcand, a tourist who was visiting from Boston with his wife.

The robot has a motionless face and virtually no skin. It was controlled remotely from a computer, and Bluetooth wireless connections were used to operate its limbs.

The bionic creation's artificial intelligence is limited to a chatbot computer program, similar to the Siri application on the Apple iPhone, said Robert Warburton, a design engineer for Shadow Robot.

"The people who made it decided to program it with the personality of a 13-year-old boy from the Ukraine," he said. "So, he's not really the most polite of people to have a conversation with."

Assembly began in August 2012 and took three months to finish.

The robot made its U.S. debut last week at New York's Comic Con convention. It will be on display at the museum throughout the fall.

Photo gallery available at this link.
 
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Bob Loblaw

Astralnaut
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Scientists have documented a widespread extinction in bee group Xylocopinae (carpenter bees) that occurred 65 million years ago, at the same time as the event that caused the extinction of land dinosaurs and many flowering plants. Understanding past bee extinctions will hopefully shed some light on the current decline in bee species.

Read more: http://bit.ly/1d0IMIO

Image credit: Sandra Rehan, University of New Hampshire


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Current hard disk drives can store an enormous amount of data but only last around ten years, as their magnetic energy barrier is so low that the information is lost after a period of time. This newly developed disk is a wafer made of tungsten and encapsulated by silicon nitride. Tungsten was used as it can withstand extreme temperatures.

Read more: http://bit.ly/HgxlSI

Image: University of Twente



 

Patrick Hughes

Stoneman
Another thing about Ford: He made a strange, dystopian "auto-worker's paradise" in Brasil called Fordlandia! From Wikipedia:
Fordlândia (Portuguese pronunciation: [fɔʁdʒiˈlɐ̃dʒɐ], Ford-land) is a now-abandoned, prefabricated industrial town established in the Amazon Rainforest in 1928 by American industrialist Henry Ford to secure a source of cultivated rubber for the automobile manufacturing operations...

The project was ultimately a total failure. Despite repeated invitations from residents and periodic promises to do so, Henry Ford never actually visited his ill-fated jungle city. The land was hilly, rocky and infertile. None of Ford's managers had the requisite knowledge of tropical agriculture. The rubber trees, packed closely together in plantations, as opposed to being widely spaced in the jungle, were easy prey for tree blight, sauva ants, lace bugs, red spiders, and leaf caterpillars,[2] a problem absent from the Asian rubber plantations, where transplanted Amazonian rubber trees faced no natural predators. The mostly indigenous workers on the plantations, given unfamiliar food such as hamburgers and forced to live in American-style housing, disliked the way they were treated—they had to wear ID badges, and work through the middle of the day under the tropical sun—and would often refuse to work. In 1930 the native workers revolted against the managers, many of whom fled into the jungle for a few days until the Brazilian Army arrived and the revolt ended.[3]

Ford forbade alcohol, women and tobacco within the town, including inside the workers' own homes. The inhabitants circumvented this prohibition by paddling out to merchant riverboats moored beyond town jurisdiction[4] and a settlement was established five miles upstream on the "Island of Innocence" with bars, nightclubs and brothels.
 

t-dub

Vapor Sloth
NASA has released a spectacular video of what it describes as a 'canyon of fire' erupting from the surface of the sun. The footage, compiled from images captured by the Solar Dynamics Observatory, shows a gigantic 200,000-mile-long solar filament rip through the sun's atmosphere, leaving behind a fiery channel where magnetic fields held the filament in place before the blast. Check it out at NASA.gov.

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Video-Canyon-Of-Fire.jpg
 
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Nooky72

Dog Marley
Astronomers making visible-light observations with NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have deduced the actual colour of a planet orbiting another star 63 light-years away.

The planet is HD 189733b, one of the closest exoplanets that can be seen crossing the face of its star.

Hubble's Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph measured changes in the colour of light from the planet before, during and after a pass behind its star. There was a small drop in light and a slight change in the colour of the light. "We saw the light becoming less bright in the blue but not in the green or red. Light was missing in the blue but not in the red when it was hidden," said research team member Frederic Pont of the University of Exeter in South West England. "This means that the object that disappeared was blue."

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Earlier observations have reported evidence for scattering of blue light on the planet. The latest Hubble observation confirms the evidence.

If seen directly, this planet would look like a deep blue dot, reminiscent of Earth's colour as seen from space. That is where the comparison ends.

On this turbulent alien world, the daytime temperature is nearly 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit, and it possibly rains glass -- sideways -- in howling, 4,500-mph winds. The cobalt blue colour comes not from the reflection of a tropical ocean as it does on Earth, but rather a hazy, blow-torched atmosphere containing high clouds laced with silicate particles. Silicates condensing in the heat could form very small drops of glass that scatter blue light more than red light.

Hubble and other observatories have made intensive studies of HD 189733b and found its atmosphere to be changeable and exotic.

HD 189733b is among a bizarre class of planets called hot Jupiters, which orbit precariously close to their parent stars. The observations yield new insights into the chemical composition and cloud structure of the entire class.

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Clouds often play key roles in planetary atmospheres. Detecting the presence and importance of clouds in hot Jupiters is crucial to astronomers' understanding of the physics and climatology of other planets.

HD 189733b was discovered in 2005. It is only 2.9 million miles from its parent star, so close that it is gravitationally locked. One side always faces the star and the other side is always dark.

In 2007, NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope measured the infrared light, or heat, from the planet, leading to one of the first temperature maps for an exoplanet. The map shows day side and night side temperatures on HD 189733b differ by about 500 degrees Fahrenheit. This should cause fierce winds to roar from the day side to the night side.
 

Hoof Hearted

Vapesallday Industries
If it were possible to fly a 747 past Earth's atmosphere straight to the Moon it would take 26 days to get there.

A trip to the Sun............ 26 YEARS!

Here's a vid I've always enjoyed... It helps show how small our pale blue dot really is (cool tune too)
 
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