A science nerd thread.

martinpb

Likes Dirt
Happy international Pi day everyone!

Celebrate everything that is in the form of a circle (wow! that's my bikes!). Today is Pi day because in American date format it is 3/14 (or 3.14...). There is some controversy however - some people believe it should be on July 22nd (22/7 which approximates to 3.14). We can celebrate both days

Pi is one of the reasons why we have civilisation and you'd have to agree one of the most awesome numbers in the universe.

:) So nerdy!


So cool! There is a Pi song: http://datasearch2.uts.edu.au/feit/it/news-events/event-detail.cfm?ItemId=25541
I like pie :)
 

SummitFever

Eats Squid
There's a great book on Pi called "A History of Pi" that you can often find for $5 at the academic remainder type bookshops. A very interesting read.

Reminds me of that old joke about the redneck that goes to university and comes home on his first term break. His dad says "tell us something in mathematic son". The son replies "Pi r squared". The dad then says "don't they teach you nothin' at that school, everyone know's pies is round".
 

harmonix1234

Eats Squid
we just had a 5 minute nerdgasm on the above link.. just click ont he orbitals tab.. oo00ooh yeah

s
Interesting to see the different properties between scandium, ti, vanadium and chromium/molybdenum.
hardness. modulus, density etc. I wonder why we don't make bikes out of niobium then?
Looks like it has a decent hardness (harder than Ti) and large density so you could make thinner walls for your tubing.

* I have no idea what I am talking about.
 

Cypher

Likes Dirt
Today gets more exciting!

Let rip a big yell at 1:59 - because then it is 3/14 1:59 or 3.14159

Also they do suggest that international Pi day is best celebrated with pies - as long as they are circular. You are supposed to calculate the circumfrence and area before you eat though.

I had chocolates shaped liked cones. yum
 

Arete

Likes Dirt
Interesting to see the different properties between scandium, ti, vanadium and chromium/molybdenum.
hardness. modulus, density etc. I wonder why we don't make bikes out of niobium then?
Looks like it has a decent hardness (harder than Ti) and large density so you could make thinner walls for your tubing.

* I have no idea what I am talking about.
Niobium is about 30x more expensive than Aluminium and about 10x more expensive than Ti. :)
 

harmonix1234

Eats Squid
Physicists create heaviest form of antimatter ever seen.



A newly created form of antimatter is the heaviest and most complex anti-thing ever seen. Anti-helium nuclei, each containing two anti-protons and two anti-neutrons, have been created and detected at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) in Upton, New York.

Anti-particles have the opposite electrical charge to ordinary matter particles (anti-neutrons, which are electrically neutral, are made up of antiquarks that have the opposite charge to their normal quark counterparts). They annihilate on contact with matter, making them notoriously tricky to find and work with. Until recently, the most complex unit of antimatter ever seen was the counterpart of the helium-3 nucleus, which contains two protons and one neutron.

But experiments at RHIC are changing that. RHIC collides heavy atomic nuclei such as lead and gold to form microscopic fireballs, where energy is so densely packed that many new particles can be created.

Last year RHIC announced the creation of a new variety of antimatter. Called the anti-hypertriton, it is made of one anti-proton, one anti-neutron and one unstable particle called an anti-lambda. The anti-hypertriton was then the heaviest antiparticle known, but the 18 nuclei of anti-helium-4 seen at RHIC now takes the record.

Anti-periodic table

"They have moved us up to the next element in the anti-periodic table," says Frank Close of the University of Oxford in the UK.

But he adds, "It doesn't take us nearer to the big question of why is the universe at large not full of antimatter?" Indeed, standard theories say that matter and antimatter were created in equal amounts in the universe's first instants, but for unknown reasons, matter prevailed.

An experiment called the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, due to launch to the International Space Station in April, will try to chip away at the problem. Anti-protons are known to occur naturally in small quantities among the high-energy particles called cosmic rays that hit Earth.

The AMS will search for heavier anti-particles. But if anti-helium is produced only rarely in collisions, as shown by RHIC, then the AMS should see no anti-helium. If it finds higher levels of anti-helium, that could bolster a theory that antimatter was not all destroyed in the early universe but merely separated in a different part of space, where it would not come into contact with matter.

The next heaviest anti-element, anti-lithium, could in theory form solid antimatter at room temperature – but it will be much harder to make. The RHIC team calculates that it will occur in their collisions less than one-millionth as often as anti-helium, putting it beyond the reach of today's colliders.
 

Arete

Likes Dirt
Students were put outdoors and asked a series of questions about a number of topics, such as firearms, marijuana, and climate change. How they rated climate change—on a scale from unproven theory to proven fact—correlated with their political stance, with Republicans/conservatives tending toward the unproven end of the scale. Not very surprising, you might say. Yet their answers also correlated with the ambient temperature, with colder days favoring ratings at the unproven end. How did this occur? Risen and Critcher supply a sequence of experiments demonstrating that this effect is not due to participants using ambient temperature in an evidentiary sense: Repeating the study indoors and explicitly calling participants' attention to the over- or underheated interrogation room did not abolish the effect. Nor is this effect due to conceptual accessibility, meaning that implicitly priming the concept of heat failed to reproduce the correlation. What they did find is that participants who experienced warmth viscerally were more apt to form clear mental images of hot environments and that this simulational fluency was linked in turn to a greater belief in climate change as a fact.
J. Pers. Soc. Psychol. 100, 10.1037/a0022460 (2011).
 

3viltoast3r

Likes Bikes and Dirt
That also provides a theory to the what exactly goes on in parliament house! It's full of bloody hot air from all the gas-bagging!
 

DJninja

Likes Bikes and Dirt
Conceptual essay on the future evolution of the human race. It's quite old (2006) but still interesting: http://www.kingkraal.com/bravo.pdf

News article from the essay:http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/6057734.stm

It will be interesting to see where we go from here. I especially agree that our dependence on medicine and technology is going to be highly detrimental. As an example of medicine, the effects of cesareans on future humans will be interesting; if we continue to cut babies out of stomachs that would usually perish we're allowing those genes to be continued. Assuming at child birth human heads evolve to be incrementally bigger over generations we are essentially causing an environment that will leave us reliant on cesareans (I've made a lot of assumptions but you get the point hopefully).
 

Rider_of_Fast

Likes Bikes
Doing the toad heart experiment at uni for a 2nd year physiology subject and our group needs to come up with an idea report proposal. I must say it was pretty cool dissecting a double-pithed toad to expose its still beating heart and throwing drugs at it to see the effects.

We are choosing to do the effects of drugs on the heart. Options:
o Acetylcholine
o Atropine
o Adrenalin
o Noradrenalin
o Isoprenaline
o Salbutamol
o Phentolamine
o Propranolol
o Atenolol
o Tyramine

Our current hypothesis:
"The addition of the antagonist propranolol will inhibit the increased effect the agonist isoprenaline has on the contractile force and heart rate of a bufo marinus."

Anyone else done the toad heart experiment and had some interesting results? We are still in the tweaking stage before putting forward a proposal so still open to ideas...
 

bitterbro

Likes Dirt
Anyone else done the toad heart experiment and had some interesting results? We are still in the tweaking stage before putting forward a proposal so still open to ideas...

i did that one last year it was really interesting. we didn't look directly at the heart but visceral arteries and veins, and we used drugs such as atropine and adrenaline. i think we also used propanolol can't remember. and we examined the effects under microscopes, so we could actually see how rapidly the endothelial cells responded to the drugs.
 

Mattydv

Likes Bikes and Dirt
Edit: Never mind, the article was slightly different to the one I thought it was.
 
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FR Drew

Not a custom title.
Apply Bundy to the toad and see if it gets into an iron guts contest, throws up on its date and then starts doing circle work in a ute before passing out with its arm around another male toad...
 

Cypher

Likes Dirt
Happy planetary alignment everyone!

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2011/05/12/3215114.htm

It is a bit chilly to be getting up at 5am, but as it will be 29 years before the next one, worth the effort I think. The current high pressure weather cell will mean excellent viewing for a lot of Australians.

Sounds like a quote from the Lord of the Rings: look to the east at (just before) dawn.
 
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