August 23rd, 2006
The UK’s Astronomy Blog reports that the final draft proposal for the definition of planet not only doesn’t create the twin planets Pluto and Charon, but actually demotes Pluto to a dwarf planet (= not a planet) because it hasn’t cleared the neighborhood around it’s orbit.  Pluto actually shares part of its orbit with Neptune. By symmetry doesn’t that disqualify Neptune as a planet?Â
{Above} Lia and Alan get the news. Alan expresses pffffft! Lia is just stunninged. They jump in the car heading back to Prague to vote down the draft proposal. You can watch the vote online starting at 9:00 AM EDT.
Posted in Family & Friends, Humor, Math & Science | 66 Comments »
August 17th, 2006
As first reported by Bad Astronomer Phil Plait, the IAU will (a week from today) vote on a new definition of planet which will denominate 12 planets in our Solar System instead of 9, with many more – perhaps millions – waiting to be discovered!
Lia and Alan discuss the proposals before the IAU on the swings. Checking the mail, they happily report that it looks like Pluto and Charon will be designated as the first twin planets!Â
Why Pluto-Charon when our own Moon is larger than both Pluto and Charon? Because the barycenter of the Pluto-Charon system is outside Pluto, while, for the Earth-Moon system it is 1700 km below the surface of the Earth. Phil points out that, with the Moon receding from Earth at 4 cm per year, in about 40 million years [correction: make that about 3 billion years] the Earth-Moon barycenter will be outside the Earth and the Moon will then be designated a planet (that is, if the IAU doesn’t redefine planet before then).Â
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Below are the 3 new planets, and some planet candidates.
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Later Lia and Alan prepare for travel to Prague for the conclusion of this planet-shattering IAU meeting.
Posted in Family & Friends, Humor, Math & Science | 1,346 Comments »
August 4th, 2006
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From a Nature article (based on Technorati ranks):
Posted in Math & Science | 8 Comments »
July 31st, 2006
Gens reports that only 25 of the 50 states have any Kemenys in them. Iowa has the fewest with 1. But Kemenys appear to be missing entirely from Maine to Vermont, from Washington to Hawaii. We couldn’t locate any in D.C. either.
Posted in Family & Friends, Humor | 345 Comments »
July 10th, 2006
It’s Don Jeffrey Herbert’s (aka Mr. Wizard) birthday today. He created Watch Mr. Wizard for NBC in 1951 and Mr. Wizard’s World for Nickelodeon in 1983. One of his early books, Mr. Wizards Experiments for Young Scientists, was illustrated by Dan Noonan, who also helped Walt Kelly illustrating Pogo. Here Egbert Elephant and his friends celebrate “Donot’s” birthday.
Posted in Books, Math & Science, Photography & Multimedia | 169 Comments »
June 26th, 2006
If you stare at the dot for 30 seconds without moving your eyes you will be shocked at the colors you see.Â
Here’s how it works. The first image is a constant brightness image with the hues (colors) reversed- it is not just a negative. The constant brightness makes the rods in the eye perceive the b&w image accurately. But the cones are fatigued by the colors. Therefore when they see white, which is a full spectrum, in the b&w image they don’t respond to the fatigued colors, and thus perceive the opposite ‘true’ colors. Â
This is a very interesting demonstration that color is not merely physics, i.e., the color of an object is not merely the colors that are not absorbed. Color depends on what the neurons tell the brain, and how the brain interprets it.
Birds and reptiles have 4 types of cones that detect 4 different frequencies. Along the way mammals lost 2 of these cones. So dogs have very poor color vision (seeing eye dogs distinguish traffic lights by position!). Fortunately for primates, a duplicated cone gene came into use, so we humans have 3 types of cones (long, medium, short or RGB, though ‘R’ is closer to yellow at its peak sensitivity). But 2 of the 3 cones (both attached to the X chromosome – which males have only one of, hence the prevalence of colorblindness in males) are very close in peak frequency, unlike the widely separated 4 cones in birds and reptiles. So not only can birds and reptiles see in more colors than humans , such as “invisible” ultraviolet, they can outsee us in colors. At least, except for owls, we have them beat in 3D with binocular vision.
Do you see a 2 or a 5?
Posted in Games, Math & Science | 4 Comments »
June 23rd, 2006
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“Mox nix” derives from the German machts nichts meaning “it makes no difference.” Yesterday the International Astronomical Union named the two newly discovered moons of Pluto Nix and Hydra. Nyx is the Greek goddess of night, but that was nixed because there is an asteroid named Nyx. So Nix, aka Nuit and Nut, the Egyptian goddess of the sky was used. The ‘N” and ‘H’ are also the first letters of New Horizons, the spacecraft that will arrive at Pluto in 2015.
New Horizons was launched as the fastest spacecraft ever, at 10 miles per second (36,000 mph, ~0.005% the speed of light), and will further accelerate to 47,000 mph by using Jupiter’s gravity as a slingshot. At that rate if one of the twins (Lia, of course) went to Pluto and back in 19 years, she would be about 1 second younger than Alan due to the Twin Paradox. If the ship traveled 99% the speed of light, Lia would arrive back about 10 years younger than Alan! Packaging this genuine fountain of youth is problematic.
Incidentally, I met Clyde Tombaugh, the discoverer of Pluto (in 1930), at the 1988 Stellafane Convention.
Posted in Books, Math & Science, Travel | 43 Comments »
June 22nd, 2006
Oly távol, messze van hazám…
Csak még egyszer láthatnám.
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President Bush visited Budapest today to commemorate the the 50th anniversary of the 1956 Hungarian Uprising. He is 4 months early (history lesson from the book Anarchy, A Graphic Guide).Â
It was October 23rd when the revolt began with demonstrations. It was November 1st when Kádár János betrayed Hungary by “inviting” Soviet troops to assist putting down the revolution. I remember my parents waking me in the middle of the night to look out the window of our main street apartment to see a long line of those tanks entering Hungary – each with exactly one soldier seated on top carrying a flaming torch. It wasn’t until my birthday on December 5th that we stepped outside our apartment for the last time and became refugees. By mid-December the borders were effectively closed.  Over 200,000 Hungarians had fled their country of birth.
 The “Daily Dish of Cosmopolitan Budapest,” Pesticide said this about Bush’s visit:
Snow’s statement that Bush’s trip “about visiting the Hungarian government and paying homage to what they went through 50 years ago” seems just a little odd, given that the current government is pretty much the same party that fought against the heroic ’56ers. Not that this should really matter, given that it’s all about a “tone poem,” whatever the f*** that might be.
They also said this about protesting (Bush, not Voldemort!):
Go to the main protest against you-know-who, which will be starting at 16:00 on Szabadság tér (Freedom Square), conveniently right in front of the American Embassy. While we can hardly fault anyone for showing up to let off some steam at Uncle Sam, do make sure to note the big, ugly-ass Soviet monument while you are there, and remember that if it wasn’t for the occasionally boorish Yanks, you’d all be speaking Russian. Or, even worse, Hungarian.
Now go see the dokumentumfilm OLY TÃVOL, MESSZE VAN HAZÃM (in Hungarian). Or better, visit Budapest and use Bob Dent’s book Budapest 1956: Locations of Drama as your guide.
Posted in Books, Movies & Television, Politics, Travel | 65 Comments »