Tuesday, 31 December 2013

The anatomy of a hangover


The anatomy of a hangover
Since some of us are going to experience some CH3CH2OH  tonight...like me for example, champagne is gonna invade my blood stream and things are gonna get shinny, no mention the amusement park...I'll feel like in a roller coaster ... but what's going to happen after? ugh..hangover 

For more details about hangover:
http://mason.gmu.edu/~cpernica/analysis.html
Image via reddit

Timelapse of Cepheid variable star RS Puppis taken by the Hubble Space Telescope.


Timelapse of Cepheid variable star RS Puppis taken by the Hubble Space Telescope.  Light echoes ripple through the surrounding nebula as the star pulses in a 41 day cycle.

Watch video:
http://www.spacetelescope.org/videos/heic1323a/
More about light echos:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_echo
Image via infinity-imagined

“As a fraction of the lifespan of the universe as measured from the beginning to the evaporation of the last black...


“As a fraction of the lifespan of the universe as measured from the beginning to the evaporation of the last black hole, life as we know it is only possible for 1/10^30 of a percent. And that’s why, for me, the most astonishing wonder of the universe isn’t a star or a planet or a galaxy. It isn’t a thing at all. It’s an instant in time. And that time is now. Humans have walked the earth for just the shortest fraction of that briefest of moments in deep time. But in our 200,000 years on this planet we’ve made remarkable progress. It was only 2,500 years ago that we believed that the sun was a god and measured its orbit with stone towers built on the top of a hill. Today the language of curiosity is not sun gods, but science. And we have observatories that are almost infinitely more sophisticated than those towers, that can gaze out deep into the universe. And perhaps even more remarkably through theoretical physics and mathematics we can calculate what the universe will look like in the distant future. And we can even make concrete predictions about its end. And I believe that it’s only by continuing our exploration of the cosmos and the laws of nature that govern it that we can truly understand ourselves and our place in this universe of wonders. ”

Just want to thank Brian Cox for all of his great work- Wonders Of The Universe is perhaps the only show that I not just love it....really tickles my cognizance 
The Arrow of Time - Wonders of the Universe - BBC Two

Mapping How Emotions Manifest in the Body


Mapping How Emotions Manifest in the Body
A new study by Finnish researchers published  in the Proceedings of the National Academies of Sciences, suggests that our emotions do indeed tend to influence our bodies in consistent ways.

Across five experiments, 701 participants “were shown two silhouettes of bodies alongside emotional words, stories, movies, or facial expressions. They were asked to color the bodily regions whose activity they felt increasing or decreasing while viewing each stimulus.”

The emotions were generated by having the subjects read short stories or watch movies. On a blank, computerized figurine, they were then asked to color in the areas of their body where sensations became stronger (the red and yellow) or weaker (blue and black) when they felt a certain way.

The mapping exercise produced what you might expect: an angry hot-head, a happy person lighting up all the way through their fingers and toes, a depressed figurine that was literally blue (meaning they felt little sensation in their limbs). Almost all of the emotions generated changes in the head area, suggesting smiling, frowning, or skin temperature changes, while feelings like joy and anger saw upticks in the limbs—perhaps because you’re ready to hug, or punch, your interlocutor.

Meanwhile, “sensations in the digestive system and around the throat region were mainly found in disgust,” the authors wrote. It's worth noting that the bodily sensations weren't blood flow, heat, or anything else that could be measured objectively—they were based solely on physical twinges subjects said they experienced.

Source:
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2013/12/mapping-how-emotions-manifest-in-the-body/282713/

Reference:
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/d-brief/2013/12/30/body-atlas-reveals-where-we-feel-happiness-and-shame/#.UsKqmNIW3_E
Gif via echophon

A remarkably intense auroral band flooded the northern night with shimmering colors on December 7.


A remarkably intense auroral band flooded the northern night with shimmering colors on December 7. The stunning sequence captured here was made with a camera fixed to a tripod under cold, clear skies near Ester, just outside of Fairbanks, Alaska.

Monday, 30 December 2013

The bird music sank into her, like a song you used to know but forgot long ago.


The bird music sank into her, like a song you used to know but forgot long ago. You hear a piano play it some day, and for a minute you feel a happy pain, but you don't know why. Ego avis volare

Pictured is the Super-Kamiokande, a giant neutrino detector, buried 1000m underground in Japan.


Pictured is the Super-Kamiokande, a giant neutrino detector, buried 1000m underground in Japan. Usually filled with 50,000 tonnes of pure water, the observatory was designed to search for proton decay, study solar and atmospheric neutrinos, and keep watch for supernovae in the Milky Way Galaxy.

A neutrino interaction with the electrons or nuclei of water can produce a charged particle that moves faster than the speed of light in water (not to be confused with exceeding the speed of light in a vacuum, which is impossible). This creates a cone of light known as Cherenkov radiation, which is the optical equivalent to a sonic boom.

The Cherenkov light is projected as a ring on the wall of the detector and recorded by the PMTs. Using the timing and charge information recorded by each PMT, the interaction vertex, ring direction and flavor of the incoming neutrino is determined. From the sharpness of the edge of the ring the type of particle can be inferred. The multiple scattering of electrons is large, so electromagnetic showers produce fuzzy rings. Highly relativistic muons, in contrast, travel almost straight through the detector and produce rings with sharp edges.

Know more:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super-Kamiokande
Image via imgur

Artist’s logarithmic scale conception of the observable universe with the Solar System at the center, inner and...


Artist’s logarithmic scale conception of the observable universe with the Solar System at the center, inner and outer planets, Kuiper belt, Oort cloud, Alpha Centauri, Perseus Arm, Milky Way galaxy, Andromeda galaxy, nearby galaxies, Cosmic Web, Cosmic microwave radiation and Big Bang’s invisible plasma on the edge.

Huge version:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e7/Observable_universe_logarithmic_illustration.png

Source:http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Observable_universe_logarithmic_illustration.png

This tiny fluff ball is a woolly aphid (subfamily Eriosomatinae).


This tiny fluff ball is a woolly aphid (subfamily Eriosomatinae).  Apparently they’re pretty common, but I’ve never seen them before.  Grouped on branches, they look like mold or spiderweb clumps.  Floating through the air, they look like cottonwood or willow fluff.

Know more:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eriosomatinae
Image via Wikimedia Commons

The skin communicates with the liver


The skin communicates with the liver
Researchers from the University of Southern Denmark have discovered that the skin is capable of communicating with the liver. The discovery has surprised the scientists, and they say that it may help our understanding of how skin diseases can affect the rest of the body.

Source and further reading:
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-12/uosd-sdt120613.php

Image: Scientists covered the mice with blue latex to prevent evaporation from the skin and thus stop the heat loss. With this loss the mice stopped accumulating fat in the liver. This shows that the skin is communicating with the liver.
Credit: Birgitte Svennevig/SDU.

Simulations back up theory that Universe is a hologram


Simulations back up theory that Universe is a hologram
A ten-dimensional theory of gravity makes the same predictions as standard quantum physics in fewer dimensions.

A team of physicists has provided some of the clearest evidence yet that our Universe could be just one big projection.

In 1997, theoretical physicist Juan Maldacena proposed that an audacious model of the Universe in which gravity arises from infinitesimally thin, vibrating strings could be reinterpreted in terms of well-established physics. The mathematically intricate world of strings, which exist in nine dimensions of space plus one of time, would be merely a hologram: the real action would play out in a simpler, flatter cosmos where there is no gravity.

Maldacena's idea thrilled physicists because it offered a way to put the popular but still unproven theory of strings on solid footing — and because it solved apparent inconsistencies between quantum physics and Einstein's theory of gravity. It provided physicists with a mathematical Rosetta stone, a 'duality', that allowed them to translate back and forth between the two languages, and solve problems in one model that seemed intractable in the other and vice versa (see 'Collaborative physics: String theory finds a bench mate'). But although the validity of Maldacena's ideas has pretty much been taken for granted ever since, a rigorous proof has been elusive.

In two papers posted on the arXiv repository, Yoshifumi Hyakutake of Ibaraki University in Japan and his colleagues now provide, if not an actual proof, at least compelling evidence that Maldacena’s conjecture is true.

In one paper, Hyakutake computes the internal energy of a black hole, the position of its event horizon (the boundary between the black hole and the rest of the Universe), its entropy and other properties based on the predictions of string theory as well as the effects of so-called virtual particles that continuously pop into and out of existence. In the other, he and his collaborators calculate the internal energy of the corresponding lower-dimensional cosmos with no gravity. The two computer calculations match.

“It seems to be a correct computation,” says Maldacena, who is now at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey and who did not contribute to the team's work.

The findings “are an interesting way to test many ideas in quantum gravity and string theory”, Maldacena adds. The two papers, he notes, are the culmination of a series of articles contributed by the Japanese team over the past few years. “The whole sequence of papers is very nice because it tests the dual nature of the universes in regimes where there are no analytic tests.”

“They have numerically confirmed, perhaps for the first time, something we were fairly sure had to be true, but was still a conjecture — namely that the thermodynamics of certain black holes can be reproduced from a lower-dimensional universe,” says Leonard Susskind, a theoretical physicist at Stanford University in California who was among the first theoreticians to explore the idea of holographic universes.

Neither of the model universes explored by the Japanese team resembles our own, Maldacena notes. The cosmos with a black hole has ten dimensions, with eight of them forming an eight-dimensional sphere. The lower-dimensional, gravity-free one has but a single dimension, and its menagerie of quantum particles resembles a group of idealized springs, or harmonic oscillators, attached to one another.

Nevertheless, says Maldacena, the numerical proof that these two seemingly disparate worlds are actually identical gives hope that the gravitational properties of our Universe can one day be explained by a simpler cosmos purely in terms of quantum theory.

Source:
http://www.nature.com/news/simulations-back-up-theory-that-universe-is-a-hologram-1.14328

References:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1311.7526
http://arxiv.org/abs/1311.5607
Image via imgur

Soaking flowers in highlighter fluid


Soaking flowers in highlighter fluid
This is a science experiment for children, where you change the color of the flower by soaking it in highlighter fluid.

More info about this experiment here:
http://www.funathomewithkids.com/2013/08/flower-science-experiment-for-kids-diy.html

If Satan plays miniature golf, this is his favorite hole.


If Satan plays miniature golf, this is his favorite hole. A ball struck at A, in any direction, will never find the hole at B — even if it bounces forever.

The idea arose in the 1950s, when Ernst Straus wondered whether a room lined with mirrors would always be illuminated completely by a single match.

Straus’ question went unanswered until 1995, when George Tokarsky found a 26-sided room with a “dark” spot; two years later D. Castro offered the 24-sided improvement bellow. If a candle is placed at A, and you’re standing at B, you won’t see its reflection anywhere around you — even though you’re surrounded by mirrors.

Source and further reading:
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/IlluminationProblem.html
Image via Wikimdia Commons

Eye Cells Inkjet-Printed for First Time


Eye Cells Inkjet-Printed for First Time
Scientists have printed adult eye cells for the first time using an inkjet printer. The technique was carried out using animals cells but paves the way for therapies that could treat blindness in humans. Scientists have previously printed embryonic stem cells and other immature cells but thought adult cells would be too fragile - however, the printed retina cells not only survived, but were able to grow and develop.

Source and further reading:
http://www.livescience.com/42032-inkjet-printed-eye-cells-blindness.html
Image via reddit

Sunday, 29 December 2013

Vrai! ;)


Vrai! ;)

Eyjafjallajökull eruption - April 2010


Eyjafjallajökull eruption - April 2010
The volcano Eyjafjallajökull  erupted in April 2010, spewing a huge plume of ash that created phenomenal lightning displays, colored sunsets a fiery red across much of Europe, and forced flight cancellations for days.

As explosive as Eyjafjallajökull proved, it is actually only a moderately active volcano that is, one that erupts once every few centuries or even millennia, explained volcanologist Freysteinn Sigmundsson at the University of Iceland.

When it comes to a typical eruption of highly active volcanoes, scientists have learned over the years that magma chambers within the volcano gradually fill up beforehand and rapidly deflate as pressure is released, deforming the surface. However, the magma chamber that deflated in Eyjafjallajökull during the explosive April eruption was not the one that filled up right beforehand.

"One of the surprises was the complexity of the plumbing system," Sigmundsson said. "
The cause of Eyjafjallajökull's explosive eruption seemed to be the meeting of one body of magma, made up mostly of the common volcanic rock basalt, with another type of magma within the volcano, consisting largely of silica-rich trachyandesite.

The behavior of Eyjafjallajökull might be typical for such moderately active volcanoes.

Source:
http://www.livescience.com/29824-why-eyjafjallajoekull-volcano-erupted.html
Image via imgur

The cold never bothered me anyway.


The cold never bothered me anyway.
Saw Frozen last night, mostly alone since Matt told me that "cute, perfect princesses are boring...where is the action? where are the robots? where is the dirt and bugs?"  I so need a little girl  ;)

You're More Likely to Tell a Secret During Pillow Talk


You're More Likely to Tell a Secret During Pillow Talk
The sweet little nothings whispered in the throes of post orgasmic bliss? Those might actually be your deepest, most sensitive secrets. A new study is looking into why the exchanges during pillow talk could be the most open moments we will ever experience with our sex partners. The University of Connecticut recently released a study to Medical Xpress investigating why we let out our precious secrets after and not before sex. 

Pillow talk, referred to in the science community as the post-coital time interval, is most likely impacted by the hormonal changes that happen during sex and orgasm, provoking us to communicate more openly with our partners. Whether those communications are an, "I love you," blurted out weeks too soon or a "I'm seeing someone else," inopportunely confessed, they are, as a baseline, our most confessional.

The culprit for our word vomit is oxytocin, the feel-good love hormone, which floods our bodies as a result of orgasm post-sex. Author Amanda Denes explains, "While men as well as women experience the post-climax oxytocin surge, testosterone is thought to dampen the effects of oxytocin, which may mean fewer warm, fuzzy feelings post-sex for individuals with more testosterone." Those individuals would be men, of course.

In the study, Denes found that women who had an orgasm during sex were more likely to disclose positive emotions to their partners than those who didn't come. And across the board, women always disclose more positive feelings during pillow talk than men do. This all comes down to oxytocin, which increases feelings of trust and connection in an individual.

The intensity of your pillow talk also relates to how much you like the person you're humping. Committed couples were more likely to not regret those warm fuzzies expressed during pillow talk, perhaps a sign that their love and trust has already influenced their rate of disclosure.

Which means, when we tell secrets during pillow talk, there's less of a risk involved than, say, in the middle of a grocery store aisle. There's not a better moment to slip in a small disclosure—"You mean the world to me," "I'm really happy," "I returned your hideous Christmas gift,"—than when your body and feelings are literally drunk on love.

Article by  Kate Hakala

Source and further reading:
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-12-science-pillow.html
Reference:
http://www.sph.umich.edu/news_events/findings/spring13/research/sex.htm

Bone Marrow


Bone Marrow
Bone marrow is an integral part in the life of a human being and it functions as the stemming up region for many of the blood cells including the red blood cells which carry oxygen from lungs to the other tissues. Furthermore, as it involves in the production of white blood cells, which directly involves with the persons immunity, bone marrow failure can lead to poor immune response and to an increased susceptibility towards infections. Because of these reasons, the bone marrow failure would be detrimental to human life and it may even lead to fatal outcomes when there is no other way to compensate.

Bone marrow would contain precursor cells from which all other types of cells stem out and would also consist of many of the precursor cells that it had already produced. Apart from these two, the marrow would also consist of matrix cells as well as fat cells to a certain extent. In a healthy person, the marrow would account for about 4% of the body weight and it can be classified into red and yellow bone marrow according to its location, color as well as from the cells that are present in abundance.

The red marrow:
This is the main marrow that gives rise to all the red blood cells, white blood cells as well as to the platelets and are located in the flat bones such as hip bones, skull bone, ribs, breast bone and the vertebra. During the fetal life and in the early childhood many of the long bones would also contain red marrows although they become ossified and replaced within few years. But, the left over red marrow will prevail throughout life according to the requirement of the human body and would continue to function even when a person reaches the elderly stage. In certain instances, many diseases including cancers, infections as well as inflammatory conditions can affect the bone marrow and at times, certain medical treatments such as radiation can also affect the marrows.

The yellow marrow:
Being located in the hollow centers of the long bones such as in the legs and in the arms, yellow marrow largely consists of fat cells although it will have a different role to that of normal fat cells. Although the initial bone marrow present in a newborn would be of the red marrow variety, it will be converted into yellow marrow at desired locations by the age of 5 years. Basically, these fat cells are the last resort for body’s energy requirements and can be consumed in an event of extreme hunger. But, the important function that is perform in relation to formation of cellular elements is its ability to convert itself into red marrow in case of large volume blood losses which would deprive the body of oxygen carrying capacity in certain instances. The yellow marrow, being so efficient, would be able to convert itself within 1 – 2 hours to take over the role of a red marrow and this is one of the natural reserves to sustain life in extreme events.

Know more:
http://www.preservearticles.com/201101133203/difference-between-red-bone-marrow-and-yellow-bone-marrow.html
Source:
http://www.sciences360.com/index.php/anatomy-physiology-173-8391/

Image: A femoral head with a cortex of cortical bone and medulla of trabecular bone. Both red bone marrow and a focus of yellow bone marrow are visible/ Wikimedia Commons

7 arm SpHidron


7 arm SpHidron
According to Daniel Elderly the SpHidron is a curved development of the original Spidrons, which were composed of plain triangles. 
More about spidrons:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spidron

So in other words sphidrons are similar to spidrons except they are smooth. I am not exactly sure what defines this surface, but this image uses a spiral wave based on a double spiral. 
I have to admit that I read the entire paper since was pretty interesting.

Read the paper here:
http://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2011/bridges2011-373.pdf

Watch video:
sphidron n6 rainbow

Saturday, 28 December 2013

Inside the D-Wave Two quantum computer housed at the NASA Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) facility.


Inside the D-Wave Two quantum computer housed at the NASA Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) facility.

A dilution refrigerator cools the 512-qubit Vesuvius processor to 20 millikelvin (near absolute zero) — more than 100 times colder than interstellar space.

​What will NASA be doing with its new quantum computer? 
Io9 has an interesting article about this:
http://io9.com/what-will-nasa-be-doing-with-its-new-quantum-computer-1468333514

More about D-Wave Two:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D-Wave_Two
Image credit: NASA Ames / John Hardman

A sun dog (mock sun, parhelion) is an optical phenomenon in which bright spots appear in the sky, frequently on a...


A sun dog (mock sun, parhelion) is an optical phenomenon in which bright spots appear in the sky, frequently on a ring around the sun.

Sundogs may appear as a colored patch of light to the left or right of the sun, 22° distant and at the same distance above the horizon as the sun, and in ice halos. They can be seen anywhere in the world during any season, but they are not always obvious or bright. 

Know more:
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/atmos/halo22.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_dog
Photo credit: Matej Kovac

Well Santa left but I still like this =)


Well Santa left but I still like this =)

Bees & Bombs creation

Brain Chemical Ratios Help Predict Developmental Delays in Preterm Infants


Brain Chemical Ratios Help Predict Developmental Delays in Preterm Infants
Although more and more infants are surviving preterm births, they remain at high risk for a variety of developmental delays. A new study published in the journal Radiology shows that two ratios of neurochemicals can predict which preemies are at the most risk for motor developmental delays.

Scientists at University College London followed 43 infants born at less than 32 weeks gestation for one year. When the infants reached full gestational age, the researchers performed both MRI scans and MR spectroscopy scans. At one year of age, the babies were assessed on motor and cognitive development. The researchers found that an increased choline/creatine ratio and decreased decreased N-acetylaspartate/choline ratio at birth were significantly associated with motor delays at one year.

Scientists hope that these results give physicians a better way to assess the efficacy of interventions for premature infants and target those children at highest need for intensive help.

Source and further reading:
http://www2.rsna.org/timssnet/media/pressreleases/pr_target.cfm?ID=728
Journal article: White Matter NAA/Cho and Cho/Cr Ratios at MR Spectroscopy Are Predictive of Motor Outcome in Preterm Infants. Radiology, 2013. doi: 10.1148/radiol.13122679
Story via Neuroscience Research Techniques
Image via Wikimedia Commons

High voltage wood erosion


High voltage wood erosion
15,000 volts

Watch video:
http://vimeo.com/60814695#

White tea


White tea
White tea is tea made from new growth buds and young leaves of the plant Camellia sinensis.

White tea is the least processed form of tea, made of beautiful silver buds and select leaves which have been steamed and dried.

Because of its minimal processing, white tea contains more nutrients than its black or green cousins, making it the mightiest of the teas, the ultimate Health Tea.

It has less caffeine than black or green tea, and far less than coffee, making it an excellent choice for those wishing to reduce caffeine.

White tea strengthens the circulatory and immune systems as well as bones and teeth, and builds healthy skin.

Know more:
http://www.whiteteaguide.com/whiteteahealthbenefits.htm

Multiverse Theory


Multiverse Theory
The Multiverse theory for the universe is the theory that describes the continuous formation of universes through the collapse of giant stars and the formation of black holes.  With each of these black holes there is a new point of singularity and a new possible universe.  As Sir Martin Rees describes it in 'Before the Beginning',  "Our universe may be just one element - one atom, as it were - in an infinite ensemble: a cosmic archipelago.  Each universe starts with its own big bang, acquires a distinctive imprint (and its individual physical laws) as it cools, and traces out its own cosmic cycle.  The big bang that triggered our entire universe is, in this grander perspective, an infinitesimal part of an elaborate structure that extends far beyond the range of any telescopes."  

This puts our place in the Multiverse into a small spectrum.  While the size of the earth in relation to the sun is minuscule, the size of the sun, the solar system, the galaxy, and even the universe, could pale in comparison to this proposed Multiverse.  It would be a shift in thinking that may help explain our big bang theory and possibly give light to the idea of parallel universes.

 While the idea of a parallel universe may sound farfetched, a book from an Oxford physicist named David Deutsch entitled, "The Fabric of Reality: The Science of Parallel Universes - And Its Implications" describes the possibilities of tapping in on parallel universes.  He proposes that through a parallel universe one computer would be able to find an identical counterpart computer from the other universe, and collaborate with it to increase knowledge of the other universe.  This involves the collaboration of many theories that have yet to have much proof.  

The Multiverse theory itself, regardless of parallel universes, has many implications.  Most notable is the unique, complex process from which our own universe was born, and how easily it could have been different.  It may imply that, out of the possibly thousands, millions, or billions of universes, ours was special enough to develop life, which, in itself is special.  Maybe life in another universe has a different meaning, but we know that our universe, at the very least is special in that it houses our kind of life.  If just one physical law were slightly different, then there would be nobody to appreciate the beauty that we can see on an everyday basis.  This brings up one ultimate question.  If every universe began from another universe, where did it all begin?  Recent physicists imply that there is no room for a creator under the current model of thinking.  However, with such a complex system of laws, principles, and forces that allowed life to exist, one must give to the possibility of a creator behind it all.

Sources:
http://edge.org/conversation/the-ultra-early-universe-martin-rees
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiverse
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fabric_of_Reality
http://www.astronomy.pomona.edu/Projects/moderncosmo/Sean's%20mutliverse.html

Friday, 27 December 2013

A ‘Magic Pill’ for Obesity and Diabetes?


A ‘Magic Pill’ for Obesity and Diabetes?
New research from Cleveland Clinic’s Lerner Research Institute shows that blocking a specific protein involved with metabolism, craving and hunger could prevent diseases driven by a high-fat diet, including obesity, diabetes and liver disease. “We have identified ABHD6 as a new potential drug target for the battle against obesity and related disorders,” says J. Mark Brown, PhD, who led the study.

“The search for a ‘magic pill’ to prevent excessive weight gain has long been sought after. These new findings suggest that drugs inhibiting ABHD6 may simultaneously activate fat burning, increase physical activity, and block the formation of new fat in the liver.”

Source and further reading:
http://www.lerner.ccf.org/news/notations/17/10/1.php

Reference:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24095738
Image from the current paper of J.M Brown

The animation shows the “relative sizes of the orbits and planets in the multi-transiting planetary systems...


The animation shows the “relative sizes of the orbits and planets in the multi-transiting planetary systems discovered by Kepler up to Nov. 2013.”

Watch the video:
Kepler Orrery III

Or if this is too crazy to look at, The New York Times has a "peacefully" version =)
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/science/space/keplers-tally-of-planets.html?_r=0

Dissolving Electronics


Dissolving Electronics
Over the past few years, the University of Illinois lab led by John Rogers  has engineered all sorts of amazing devices that bridge the gap between biology and technology: stretchable batteries that could be used in wearable gadgets or medical implants, tiny LEDs that can be implanted in the brain to manipulate individual neurons and ultrathin electronics that can graft circuits onto human skin.

Perhaps the most amazing creation, though, is their entirely dissolvable electronic circuit, which could someday be used in environmental monitoring and medical devices so that circuitry disappears after it’s no longer needed.

More about dissolvable electronic circuit:
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/05/remote-controlled-dissolvable-electronics/

Story and image via The Smithsonian

  References:
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/04/light-brain/
http://news.sciencemag.org/2011/08/electronic-skin-grafts-gadgets-body

Prism adaptation therapy can help stroke patients who have damage to the right hemisphere of their brains


Prism adaptation therapy can help stroke patients who have damage to the right hemisphere of their brains
After a stroke, some individuals suffer from spatial neglect, which occurs when part of the brain is damaged and the person is unable to recognize or respond to stimuli on the right or left half of their bodies. Historically, very few treatments or therapies were known to help those suffering from spatial neglect. New research in the journal Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair reveals that a type of therapy known as prism adaptation therapy can help those with spatial neglect following right brain stroke. Prism adaptation therapy requires the patient to wear special goggles that move the visual field laterally or vertically. Since people with spatial neglect are often unaware of their deficit, they can't voluntarily shift their focus. The prism goggles, however, does this shift for them. After two weeks of therapy, researchers with the Kessler Foundation and other universities found that individuals with a subtype of spatial neglect known as motor-intentional neglect showed significant improvement compared to individuals with perceptual-intentional neglect. Researchers say that early intervention and identification of the subtype of neglect is important to improving outcome.

Source and further reading:
http://kesslerfoundation.org/media/displaynews.php?id=446

Journal article: Presence of motor-intentional aiming deficit predicts functional improvement of spatial neglect with prism adaptation. Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair, 2013. DOI: 10.1177/1545968313516872
Story via Neuroscience Research Techniques 
Image via Wikimedia Commons

What's a normal resting heart rate?


What's a normal resting heart rate?
A normal resting heart rate for adults ranges from 60 to 100 beats a minute.
Generally, a lower heart rate at rest implies more efficient heart function and better cardiovascular fitness. For example, a well-trained athlete might have a normal resting heart rate closer to 40 beats a minute.

To measure your heart rate, simply check your pulse. Place your index and third fingers on your neck to the side of your windpipe. To check your pulse at your wrist, place two fingers between the bone and the tendon over your radial artery — which is located on the thumb side of your wrist.

When you feel your pulse, count the number of beats in 15 seconds. Multiply this number by 4 to calculate your beats per minute.

Keep in mind that many factors can influence heart rate, including:
-Activity level
-Fitness level
-Air temperature
-Body position (standing up or lying down, for example)
-Emotions
-Body size
-Medications
Although there's a wide range of normal, an unusually high or low heart rate may indicate an underlying problem. Consult your doctor if your resting heart rate is consistently above 100 beats a minute (tachycardia) or below 60 beats a minute (bradycardia) — especially if you have other signs or symptoms, such as fainting, dizziness or shortness of breath.

Article via Edward R. Laskowski, M.D.
Reference:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_rate

Video: Beating heart with blood flow via Hybrid Medical Animation

Orange Juice or simply OJ


Orange Juice or simply OJ
OJ is the best known and most popular raw food drink. It's known for it's vitamin C content and great when you have a cold. But OJ is much more! 

Drinking orange juice can make you more beautiful, according to a study by a panel of health and beauty experts.
The research revealed that nutritionists and beauty experts now advise a daily glass of orange juice to improve skin, hair and nails.
The panel of experts attribute the benefits to the vitamin C, potassium and folic acid it contains.
Vitamin C is essential in the production of collagen, along with super nutrient Lutein.
Its yellow pigment is linked to reducing sun-induced skin damage and is believed to improve elasticity of the skin.
A 200ml glass of orange typically contains 60mg vitamin C and equates to 100 per cent of an adult’s recommended daily amount.

Can Drinking Orange Juice Aid in Cancer Prevention?
Orange juice has many potential positive effects when it comes to cancer, particularly because it is high in antioxidants from flavonoids such as hesperitin and naringinin. Evidence from previous in vitro studies has indicated that orange juice can reduce the risk of leukemia in children, as well as aid in chemoprevention against mammary, hepatic, and colon cancers. Biological effects of orange juice in vitro are largely influenced by the juice's composition, which is dependent on physiological conditions of the oranges such as climate, soil, fruit maturation, and storage methods post-harvest.

Source and further reading:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/09/130913124127.htm

Reference:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23919376

Spiral Bevel Gears


Spiral Bevel Gears
Ok..so is no secret, I have a thing for anything that spins and is round..especially if it has gears =)

What are spiral bevel gears?
A spiral bevel gear is a bevel gear with helical teeth. The main application of this is in a vehicle differential, where the direction of drive from the drive shaft must be turned 90 degrees to drive the wheels. The helical design produces less vibration and noise than conventional straight-cut or spur-cut gear with straight teeth.

This animation shows spur gears morphing into bevel gears, then into spiral bevel gears, then into helical gears, and finally back into spur gears again. Oh well, I could stare at this forever ;)

Know more about spiral bevel gear:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiral_bevel_gear

References:
http://spiralbevel.com/
http://www.stepanlunin.com/book1.html

Thursday, 26 December 2013

How To Read An EKG


How To Read An EKG

What is an EKG?
An electrocardiogram (EKG or ECG) is a test that checks for problems with the electrical activity of your heart. An EKG translates the heart’s electrical activity into line tracings on paper. The spikes and dips in the line tracings are called waves.

The heart is a muscular pump made up of four chambers . The two upper chambers are called atria, and the two lower chambers are called ventricles. A natural electrical system causes the heart muscle to contract and pump blood through the heart to the lungs and the rest of the body.

An electrocardiogram (EKG or ECG) is done to:

-Check the heart’s electrical activity.
-Find the cause of unexplained chest pain, which could be caused by a heart attack, inflammation of the sac surrounding the heart (pericarditis), or angina.
-Find the cause of symptoms of heart disease, such as shortness of breath,dizziness, fainting, or rapid, irregular heartbeats (palpitations).
-Find out if the walls of the heart chambers are too thick (hypertrophied).
-Check how well medicines are working and whether they are causing side effects that affect the heart.
-Check how well mechanical devices that are implanted in the heart, such aspacemakers, are working to control a normal heartbeat.
-Check the health of the heart when other diseases or conditions are present, such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, cigarette smoking, diabetes, or a family history of early heart disease.

Reading an EKG
An EKG is a graph (thusly named an electrocardiograph) tracing the strength and direction of this electrical signal. Leads equipped with conductive goo are placed on different parts of the body allowing a view of the heart from different angles.   If the electrical activity of the heart at any given moment is traveling toward the lead being viewed, the line on the graph goes up (positive deflection).  If the electrical activity is traveling away from the lead, the line goes down (negative deflection). This graph (pictured) is being traced by a stylus on a moving piece of graph paper.  

 That first petite little hump, affectionately called the P wave, represents the electrical signal that starts in a group of cells called the Sinoatrial Node. This signal then travels through the atria (the smaller and upper two chambers of the heart) causing them to contract and push blood in to the larger and more powerful ventricles below.

The “PR Interval” segment represents a delay in the signal at another grouping of cells called the AtrioVentricular Node.  This delay allows time for the atria to completely deliver their bounty into the Ventricles. With perfect timing this signal continues through the Bundle of His.  The signal splits and speeds along down the left and right bundle branches, making its way to the Purkinje fibers and turning north again. This stimulates those Ventricular beefcakes to contract and deliver their payload to the lungs and body (if hearts had biceps, the left ventricle would be the proverbial “gun show”….it’s such a glory hog!).

The journey causing this second contraction through the ventricles is represented by the QRS portion of the EKG. The larger T wave which then finishes off our heartbeat is the repolarization of the ventricles.  I know what you’re thinking, either “what in the what now goes where?” or hopefully, “what wave represents the repolarization of the atria”?  Well, the repolarization of the atria is buried in the larger signal of the QRS and therefore not visible on the graph.

This pattern is called normal sinus rhythm.  It is the basic EKG of any normal healthy heart.  Naturally, there are variations of normal within the healthy population.

Sources:
http://www.webmd.com/heart-disease/electrocardiogram
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrocardiography
http://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2011/10/how-to-read-an-ekg-electrocardiograph/

Orbit trap


Orbit trap
In mathematics, an orbit trap is a method of colouring fractal images based upon how close an iterative function, used to create the fractal, approaches a geometric shape, called a "trap". Typical traps are points, lines, circles, flower shapes and even raster images.

Image: fractal  using a gear-shaped orbit trap/ bugman creation

More about orbit trap:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orbit_trap

Watch video:
Mandelbrot Orbit Trap Rendering! Programming How-To

References:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iterated_function

We sat in the balloon and the night dropped down until the only sounds were the crickets and the dance of our...


We sat in the balloon and the night dropped down until the only sounds were the crickets and the dance of our voices, and for a moment the world became small enough to roll back and forth between us. 

Photo credit: Mikko Lagerstedt

Nano Santa


Nano Santa
This serendipitous blob of superhydrophobic nanomaterials was discovered by University of Illinois’ Adam Steele and false colored to look like Kris Kringle! =)

Story and image via It's OK to Be Smart

Vita Radium Suppositories


Vita Radium Suppositories
Produced by the Home Products Company of Denver, Colorado, these suppositories were guaranteed to contain real radium - and probably did.

From the company's brochure:
Weak Discouraged Men! =))

Now Bubble Over with Joyous Vitality
Through the Use of
Glands and Radium

". . . properly functioning glands make themselves known in a quick, brisk step, mental alertness and the ability to live and love in the fullest sense of the word . . . A man must be in a bad way indeed to sit back and be satisfied without the pleasures that are his birthright! . . . Try them and see what good results you get!"  =))

Sources:
http://io9.com/5642377/in-the-early-1900s-real-men-used-radium-suppositories
http://www.orau.org/ptp/collection/quackcures/radsup.htm

Wednesday, 25 December 2013

The life of a snowflake


The life of a snowflake
The diverse morphologies seen in snow crystals are largely due to the bizarre temperature dependence of ice crystal growth rates, a phenomenon that was discovered 75 years ago and remains unexplained to this day. 

  Snowflakes and snow crystals are made of ice, and pretty much nothing more.  A snow crystal, as the name implies, is a single crystal of ice.  A snowflake is a more general term; it can mean an individual snow crystal, or a few snow crystals stuck together, or large agglomerations of snow crystals that form "puff-balls" that float down from the clouds.

Snowflakes are not frozen raindrops.  Sometimes raindrops do freeze as they fall, but this is called sleet.  Sleet particles don't have any of the elaborate and symmetrical patterning found in snow crystals.  Snow crystals form when water vapor condenses directly into ice, which happens in the clouds.  The patterns emerge as the crystals grow.

The most basic form of a snow crystal is a hexagonal prism. This structure occurs because certain surfaces of the crystal, the facet surfaces, accumulate material very slowly.

The story of a snowflake begins with water vapor in the air.  Evaporation from oceans, lakes, and rivers puts water vapor into the air, as does transpiration from plants.  Even you, every time you exhale, put water vapor into the air.  

   When you take a parcel of air and cool it down, at some point the water vapor it holds will begin to condense out.  When this happens near the ground, the water may condense as dew on the grass.  High above the ground, water vapor condenses onto dust particles in the air.  It condenses into countless minute droplets, where each droplet contains at least one dust particle.  A cloud is nothing more than a huge collection of these water droplets suspended in the air.

   In the winter, snow forming clouds are still mostly made of liquid water droplets, even when the temperature is below freezing.  The water is said to be supercooled, meaning simply that it is cooled below the freezing point.  As the clouds gets colder, however, the droplets do start to freeze.  This begins happening around -10 C (14 F), but it's a gradual process and the droplets don't all freeze at once.
 
   If a particular droplet freezes, it becomes a small particle of ice surrounded by the remaining liquid water droplets in the cloud.  The ice grows as water vapor condenses onto its surface, forming a snowflake in the process.  As the ice grows larger, the remaining water droplets slowly evaporate and put more water vapor into the air.  

   Note what happens to the water,  it evaporates from the water droplets and goes into the air, and it comes out of the air as it condenses on the growing snow crystals.  As the snow falls there is a net flow of water from the liquid state (cloud droplets) to the solid state (snowflakes).  This rather complicated chain of events is how a cloud freezes. 

Source and further reading:
http://www.its.caltech.edu/~atomic/publist/rpp5_4_R03.pdf

Laplace rail


Laplace rail
2 magnets disk on a axle
4.5 Volts 2Amp
2 aluminum bands on plastic

Watch video:
Laplace rail

N-body choreography


N-body choreography
When two bodies orbit around each other in space, we know exactly what happens. The bodies trace out conic sections, they do so in accordance with Kepler’s laws, and that’s it, more or less.

When three or more bodies orbit around each other in space, things can be more complicated. In the general case, no explicit formula for the orbits exists, and we have to rely on numerical simulations.

Among all these possible orbits, though, there exist some which repeat after some time.  These are called n-body choreographies (with n = the number of bodies), small islands of order in a large chaotic space of ways-things-can-be. This animation by Chris Moore shows just that.

This figure-8 animation can be perturbed in various ways. Nauenberg and Marchal independently found this version, which rotates around the x-axis and forms a continuous family of orbits connecting the figure-8 with the Lagrange orbit

More about Chris Moore's  3-Body & n-Body problems:
http://tuvalu.santafe.edu/~moore/gallery.html

Watch video:
Twenty one body Newtonian choreography; black

More about Nauenberg and Marchal version:
http://iopscience.iop.org/1538-3881/124/4/2332/fulltext/

More about Lagrangian point:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagrangian_point

Christmas Tree Worm


Christmas Tree Worm
The Christmas tree worm is species of tube-building polychaete worms found throughout the world’s tropical waters. As their name suggests, they are shaped like Christmas trees and come in a wide array of bright colors.

The body of the worm is hidden inside a burrow drilled into coral. Each worm as two spiral-shaped ‘crowns’ that are used for feeding and breathing. Every spiral consists of highly ciliated tentacles called radioles. The cilia function as tiny hairs which beat constantly to move food particles and mucus into the worm’s mouth. The radioles are also used for gas exchange.

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spirobranchus_giganteus
Pictures via Wikimedia Commons

Quite possibly the cutest photo ever taken. =)


Quite possibly the cutest photo ever taken. =)

Credit: Hugh Stewart

The Ouya


The Ouya
The Ouya isn’t your standard liquid cocktail. It’s served as liquid-filled beads formed using a technique known as reverse spherification, a fancy term for turning liquids or liquefied foods into gel-covered, liquid-filled spheres that pop in your mouth.

Reverse spherification exploits a chemical reaction between calcium ions and alginate, a polysaccharide abundant in the cell walls of brown algae. In the presence of calcium ions, alginate molecules cross-link with each other to form a gel. In the kitchen, chefs learned that if they added calcium to liquids or pureed foods and then poured droplets of their concoctions into an alginate solution, the alginate would react with calcium ions on the surface of the droplets to form a thin gel skin that would morph the droplets into what looked like solid beads. The inside, however, would remain liquid. (It’s called reverse spherification because originally alginate was added to the liquefied food and then droplets were dropped into a calcium solution.)

What you need?
To surprise your guests with this bar magic yourself, you’ll need a blender, a scale, bowls, a slotted spoon, a silicon spherical mold tray, some standard bar fare — tequila, Campari, fresh lime juice, water — and some less conventional items like calcium lactate gluconate, xantham gum and alginate.

You can buy all these ingredients separately or use a spherification kit from ChefSteps.
http://store.chefsteps.com/collections/spherification-course-kits

Steps
1. Start off by blending 30 grams of tequila, 18 grams of Campari, 9.5 g of lime juice and 35 grams of water together. Then blend in 1.8 grams of xantham gum, a thickening agent, and 0.15 grams of calcium lactate gluconate, which is your source of calcium for the spherification process.

2. Pour this mixture into the silicon spherical mold tray, cover it and stick it in the freezer until the hemispheres are completely frozen. Spherification can be done without freezing, but because the alcoholic Ouya mixture has a lower density than the alginate solution, the liquid droplets don’t fully submerge in the alginate solution and you end up with messy gooey Ouya strands instead of plump, round orange spheres. (We learned this the hard way.)

3. While the Ouya balls freeze, prepare a 0.5 percent alginate bath by pouring a liter of cold distilled water into a blender. Measure out exactly 5.0 grams of sodium alginate. Start the blender and slowly add in the sodium alginate. Keep blending until the solution is homogenous. Let it sit for about an hour to let the alginate hydrate and the air bubbles escape.

4. Pour distilled water into two medium sized bowls. You’ll use these to rinse the alginate off your Ouya beads once they’ve spherified.

5. Heat the alginate solution to about 50 degrees Celsius on a stove or microwave.

6. Remove the frozen Ouya hemispheres from the mold and drop them, one by one, into the alginate solution. Shake them around gently for 30 seconds and then lift them gently with a slotted spoon.

7. Rinse the spheres in the distilled water baths and then place them in shot glasses.

8. Shoot back the spheres and ready yourself for a delightful Ouya explosion in your mouth

Source:
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/12/spherification-chefsteps/

Tuesday, 24 December 2013

I like the stars.


I like the stars. It's the illusion of permanence, I think. I mean, they're always flaring up and caving in and going out. But from here, I can pretend...I can pretend that things last. I can pretend that lives last longer than moments. Mortals flicker and flash and fade. Worlds don't last; and stars and galaxies are transient, fleeting things that twinkle like fireflies and vanish into cold and dust. But I can pretend...

Non-invasive method devised to sequence DNA of human eggs


Non-invasive method devised to sequence DNA of human eggs
Researchers have  for the first time determined the genome sequence of human egg cells without destroying them.

This could help couples who undergo in vitro fertilization (IVF) by allowing them to choose a genetically healthy embryo to implant into the mother without disturbing the embryo’s growth.

Read more:
http://www.nature.com/news/non-invasive-method-devised-to-sequence-dna-of-human-eggs-1.14412

Image: Human embryo after zona drilling
Colour-enhanced scanning electron micrograph of a human embryo at day 3. The egg has been fertilised in vitro and has developed to this stage in culture. The coat around the egg (zona pellucida) has been treated with acid Tyrodes solution to make a hole so an individual cell can be removed. This cell can then be used for genetic diagnosis before the embryo is transferred to the woman’s uterus. This allows the selective implantation of embryos that do not carry the genetic disease in question.

Mechanical alarm clock with flintlock candle lighting mechanism


Mechanical alarm clock with flintlock candle lighting mechanism
The flashpan of the mechanism was filled with gunpowder.  When the alarm sounded the clock would strike the frizzen, igniting the gunpowder which then would light the candle.

Originates from the early 18th century.

Source:http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details/collection_image_gallery.aspx?assetId=265555&objectId=55386&partId=1

RIP Mikhail Kalashnikov (Nov. 10th, 1919 - Dec. 23rd, 2013)


RIP Mikhail Kalashnikov (Nov. 10th, 1919 - Dec. 23rd, 2013)
Mikhail Kalashnikov, designer of the fabled AK-47 automatic rifle which became a weapon of choice for guerrillas and governments the world over, died yesterday at age 94.