Showing posts with label SciPopular. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SciPopular. Show all posts

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Stuff of Matter

Stuff of Matter, Stuff that Matters.

The periodic table of chemical elements is a masterpiece of organized chemical information. The elements represent stuff of matter, stuff that matters. Not only on Earth but also on other celestial bodies. 
Dark matter is a special type of matter. It accounts for an estimated 84% of matter in the universe and 23% of the mass-energy. Dark matter cannot been observed by eye, it doesn't emit or absorb light or other electromagnetic radiation at any significant level. Instead, its existence and properties are inferred from its gravitational effects on visible matter, radiation, and the large scale structure of the universe (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_matter).

With the aid of the Hubble Space Telescope it was possible to identify a small filament of dark matter, an invisible cosmic structure that can only be detected by the gravitational effects it has on its surroundings. Scientists have been able to construct a 3-D view of the filament, the first time ever that the difficult-to-detect dark matter has been measured in such detail (https://www.facebook.com/AstrophysicsAndAstronomy).

First 3-D model of dark matter

The Periodic Table of Elements: 

The periodic table of elements according to relative abundance. The table will vary for other celestial bodies. Who cares? 

https://www.facebook.com/AnalyticalChemistryTechniques

The version of the periodic table of elements below visualizes the occurrence of the particular elements in objects of daily life.

http://www.sciencegeek.net/tables/tables.shtml

Dmitri Mendeleev (creator of the first version of the periodic table of elements in 1869).

Dmitri Mendeleev:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dmitri_Mendeleev

And what about this one?



Links:

Monday, July 16, 2012

Creative Thinking

CrEaTiVe Thinking.

Think like a wise fool. The wise fool will reverse our standard assumptions, notices things that other people overlook, can be irreverent, cryptic, absurd, takes the contrary position in most conversations and stimulates thinking. 
Example: "If a man is sitting on a horse facing the rear, WHY do we assume that it is the man who is backwards, and not the horse?".

The Wise Fool 
(from Roger von Oech)

To create, a person must:
  • Have knowledge but forget the knowledge
  • See unexpected connections in things but not have a mental disorder
  • Work hard but spend time doing nothing
  • Create many ideas yet most of them are useless
  • Look at the same thing as everyone else, yet see something different
  • Desire success but learn how to fail
  • Be persistent but not stubborn
  • Listen to experts but know how to disregard them
 
from SayPeople
from deviantART

Links:

from Michael Michalko

Friday, April 13, 2012

Majorana particles

Majorana fermions.
Dutch researchers discovered the predicted Majorana particles (quasiparticles that are their own antiparticles). Computer technology based on quantum bits (qubits, 0 AND 1 at the same time) i.s.o. bits (0 or 1) will result in very fast computers, which in turn will speed up development of e.g. medicins. 

Fermions vs. Bosons: 
"Particles and quasiparticles come in two basic types, fermions and bosons, depending on the type of spin they have. The elementary particles of matter (electrons, quarks and neutrinos) are fermions, while photons and other force carriers are bosons. Particles are paired with antiparticles—antimatter electrons are positrons, etc.—but photons are their own antiparticles. To annihilate, particles and antiparticles must have opposite charge, so Majorana fermions, which are their own antiparticles, need to be electrically-neutral. At present, no fermion is known to be its own antiparticle, although neutrinos may have this property (we don't yet know)." 


Saturday, February 18, 2012

arXiv

The Physics arXiv blog.
My most favourite blog is by far that from the Technology Review: "The Physics arXiv blog". Some very interesting topics below: 

  • Mathematical Model Computes Snow Flake Shapes for the First Time
  • Self Portrait of Young Leonardo da Vinci
  • How Neutrino Beams Could Reveal Cavities Inside Earth
  • Electron Holography Produces First Image of a Single Protein
  • Physicists Predict The Existence of Time Crystals
Holography of a Protein Molecule

Time Crystals
Snow Flakes

Leonardo
Images are from Technology review.
 

Saturday, January 28, 2012

SnapIt

SnapIt.

The screen capture software SnapIt captures anything you see on your PC screen. It is a convenient tool for graphic designers, bloggers who capture and crop images for their posts, for tech writers who need to describe menus and interfaces of applications, web designers and those who work with graphics every day. It captures and auto saves images with one click.

Researchers 'recreated' a Stradivarius for the first time by making use of hi-tech tools such as X-Ray images, CT scanning and computer-aided carvin.
Unfortunately, we can't make use of these hi-tech tools. The only tool we have is making screenshots. Cropping these screenshots after being captured with PrtScrn is often a hassle. The handy tool SnapIt is a covenient solution to tackle these problems.

* Supports hotkeys, auto-saving, clipboard
* Automatically copies screenshots to the clipboard
* Tracks capture history, auto-saves captured images

* Saves files in BMP, GIF, JPEG, PNG and TIFF formats
* Auto-names captured images

SnapIt, a convenient tool for us bloggers

Friday, December 09, 2011

SpiderSilkMusic

Spider Silk and Music.

Comparing the structure-function relationships in spider silk and a musical composition. Ontology Logs (ologs) connects spider silk and music.


MIT researchers claim that there is a deep relation between the lightweight strength in spider silk and the sonic structure of a melody in a music composition. This may be beneficial for the development of materials with repeating patterns. Spider silk has a repeating structure at nano level. The step-by-step comparison begins with the primary building blocks: an amino acid and a sound wave, and moves up to the level of a beta sheet nanocomposite (the secondary structure of a protein consists of repeated hierarchical patterns of protein assemblages) and a musical riff (a repeated pattern of notes or chords). 
iii) web.mit.edu


Here is another interesting example (olog) of structure-function relationships: the prediction of the protein 3D structure from the aminoacid sequence (including a GPCR membrane protein). The blinded inferences are de novo, i.e., they do not use homology modeling or sequence-similar fragments from known structures. The co-evolution signals provide sufficient information to determine accurate 3D protein structure to 2.7–4.8 Ã… Cα-RMSD error relative to the observed structure, over at least two-thirds of the protein (method called EVfold, details at http://EVfold.org/). This discovery provides insight into essential interactions constraining protein evolution and will facilitate a comprehensive survey of the universe of protein structures, new strategies in protein and drug design, and the identification of functional genetic variants in normal and disease genomes.

Wednesday, October 05, 2011

NobelPrizeChemistry

Nobel Prize Chemistry 2011.

Crystals of golden proportions:
Daniel Shechtman received the 2011 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his discovery of quasicrystals, perfectly ordered materials that never repeat themselves. 

The X-ray diffraction pattern reflects the atom positions in a crystal.
"It's all about symmetry".

The Discovery of Quasicrystals:
The atoms in the crystal in front of Shechtman yielded a forbidden symmetry. It was just as impossible as a football – a sphere – made of only sixcornered polygons. Since then, mosaics with intriguing patterns and the golden ratio in mathematics and art have helped scientists to explain Shechtman’s bewildering observation. 

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Neutrino quotes

Neutrino quotes.

Most famous equation E=mc2 incorrect? What would be Einstein's comment? 

Einstein Was Right, Neutrino's Do Obey The Speed Of Light.


  • Neutrino's faster than light (>300,000 km/sec)? The most famous equation E=mc^2 turns out to be incorrect? Travellin' in time might theoretically become possible? Virtually everything in modern physics and fundamental laws of nature would have to be rethought. Don't want to think about the implications. Do hope the experiments are flawed and Einstein was right. The Telegraph: CERN-scientists-break-the-speed-of-light
  • Marc Lee Pusey: Actually, I hope that Albert is proven wrong on this one. Science needs a major game changing shake-up every now and again, and this one looks to be a possible doorway to a fascinating future of possibilities.
  • Future possibilities far beyond our thoughts indeed. Uncertain about certainty or certain about uncertainty, that's the question. Our minds have to be shaken up too, once in a while.
  • Neutrino likes Guinness. Btw, was mentioned in the Guinness Book of Records, broke the universal record of speed.

'Atom interrogation, oh, Science you're so Funny'!
  • Where were you on Facebook, a million years ago? We have G+ now, TALK! First day at G+. Like!
  • My apologizes, we didn't have Facebook then. Why are you delayed? Did speak neutrino already 20 years ago. Not on Facebook because that didn't exist at that time either. Neutrino said he did leave at the same time as you did a million years... ago and travelled faster than the speed of light. Your speed was 6000 m/s less than neutrino's. What took you so long? Was it because you thought Einstein's oldfashioned E=mc2 was still valid then? You should have upgraded your engine like neutrino's.



  • E = NEQ mc2:
Neutrino's can travel even faster than light,
Then Einstein's equation was not quite right,
Scientists confused,
Others pretty amused,
Would it be possible now to book a time-flight?

  • Marc Lee Pusey: I'll be booking mine in the future to come back to now and help me get stuff done.
  • You can already order some pints of Guinness in advance in the future and empty them when you'll be back to now. Fresher than fresh. Unfortunately, at least one disadvantage, the price!

The Telegraph: The Telegraph: CERN scientists-break-the-speed-of-light

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Crystal Cave Palace

"The Crystal's Cave", a Crystal Palace.
 
"The Crystal's Cave" or "Giant Crystal Cave" is a cave connected to the Naica mine in Mexico. Geologist Juan Manuel García-Ruiz of Granada's University calls this cave with stunning crystals "the Sistine Chapel of crystals". The cave at a depth of 300 m is extremely hot with air temperatures reaching up to 58 °C with 90 to 99 percent humidity. This is due to an underground magma chamber below the cave. The magma heated the ground water and it became saturated with minerals, including large quantities of gypsum (CaSO4.2H2O). The hollow space of the cave was filled with this mineral rich hot water and remained filled for about 500,000 years. During this time, the temperature of the water remained very stable at over 50°C. This allowed crystals to form and grow to immense sizes. The main chamber contains giant selenite (crystallized gypsum or CaSO4.2H2O) crystals. The cave's largest crystal found to date is 11 m in length, 4 m in diameter and 55 tons in weight. The floor of the cave is covered with perfectly-faceted crystalline blocks. Huge crystal beams jut out from both the blocks and the floor. 


At the same level two other caverns were discovered, "The Queen’s Eye Cave" and "The Candle's Cave". 

"The Cave of Swords" is located at a depth of 120 m, above the Cave of Crystals, and contains spectacular, smaller (1-2 m long) crystals.

"The Ice Palace" is at a depth of 150 m and is not flooded, but its crystal formations are much smaller, with small 'cauliflower' formations and fine, threadlike crystals.

Naica's Crystal Cave


 
The heavenly Vatican Sistine Chapel, Terracotta Army of impressive artificial sculpture,
But for us humble crystallographers this Mexican Crystal Palace is an outstanding phenomena of nature,
It’s stunning in beauty and size,
An amazing Crystal Paradise,
Wonder if anybody will ever be able to mount these giant crystals for elucidating their structure.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Optical Illusions

Visual illusions.

'Fooled by the Brain'.
An optical or visual illusion can be created by fooling the brain. The explanation for this phenomena is that the information obtained through the eyes is used for only 20% by the brain to form an image. The rest is complemented by the brain through past experience, expectations and other senses. The resulting image is only an extrapolated interpretation of reality. Therefore, reality can be interpreted differently and result in an optical illusion. The brain can be considered as a bit sloppy in this respect, most likely for reasons of 'efficiency' at the cost of accuracy. Unfortunately, the failure must be taken for granted. Nevertheless, optical illusions can be fascinating, enjoyable and awesome. Enjoy!

 
Spinning Dancers

'Visual illusions: Dissociation between perception and reality'.
"Visual illusions are defined by the dissociation between physical reality and subjective perception of an object or event. When we experience a visual illusion, we may see something that is not there, or fail to see something that is there, or even see something different from what is there. Because of this dissociation between perception and reality, visual illusions demonstrate the ways in which the brain can fail to recreate the physical world" (by Martinez-Conde)

Silencing illusion

'We see things as we would like to see things'.
There's an analogy with the above mentioned influence of a past event or experience on the brain. Our brain determines our view based on our experience and in this way our thoughts and views are mostly formed on the basis of prejudice and therefore free thoughts on a particular subject will be blocked. If we experience something it will be imprinted in our brain together with our expectation and view in view of a possible recurring occurence. As a consequence, our thoughts and view won't change easily, our thoughts about the subject are 'stuck'. If this is the case we then should feed our brain with a renewed vision by forcing ourselves to have a look at it from the other side. In this way a negative view or opinion can be changed in a positive one (Avatar). 
However, we see things as we would like to see things. The conscious and unconscious observations of reality will pass several 'filters' of our brain and will be incomplete and/or transformed into distorted reflections of 'reality'. Our views are to some extent coloured by our mind. The world around us will be interpreted differently by each of us. This is why we experience life differently. A positive or negative attitude matters a lot and in fact will result in different views on the world. We experience reality only as an approximation of reality. The phenomena of visual illusions is a nice example that our brain can fool us. Be aware and stay always on guard, you can and you will be cheated. 
Again, reality will only be experienced as an approximation of reality and will never be complete or real!
Rotating Snake illusion for a still image
 

Thursday, September 08, 2011

Science Songified

Science Songified: 'Symphony of Science'.

A musical project, designed to deliver scientific knowledge and philosophy in a musical form.

Releases:
1. A Glorious Dawn 2. We are All Connected 3. Our Place in the Cosmos 4. The Unbroken Thread 5. The Poetry of reality 6. The case for mars 7. A Wave of reason 8. The Big Beginning 9. Ode to the Brain! 10. Children of Africa 11. The Quantum World!

Symphony of Science - The Quantum World! (Subatomic Science Songified)
A musical investigation into the nature of atoms and subatomic particles, the jiggly things that make up everything we see. Featuring Morgan Freeman, Stephen Hawking, Michio Kaku, Brian Cox, Richard Feynman, and Frank Close.

Subatomic Science Songified - The Quantum World!

Lyrics:

[Morgan Freeman] 
So, what are we really made of? 
Dig deep inside the atom and you'll find tiny particles 
Held together by invisible forces 
Everything is made up 
Of tiny packets of energy
 Born in cosmic furnaces

 [Frank Close] 
The atoms that we're made of have 
Negatively charged electrons 
Whirling around a big bulky nucleus 

[Michio Kaku] 
The Quantum Theory 
Offers a very different explanation 
Of our world

 [Brian Cox] 
The universe is made of  
Twelve particles of matter
 Four forces of nature 
That's a wonderful and significant story
  
[Richard Feynman] 
Suppose that little things 
Behaved very differently 
Than anything big 
Nothing's really as it seems 
It's so wonderfully different 
Than anything big 
The world is a dynamic mess 
Of jiggling things
It's hard to believe 

[Kaku]
 The quantum theory
Is so strange and bizarre 
Even Einstein couldn't get his head around it
  
[Cox]
 In the quantum world 
The world of particles 
Nothing is certain 
It's a world of probabilities
(refrain)

 [Feynman]
 It's very hard to imagine 
All the crazy things 
That things really are like 
Electrons act like waves 
No they don't exactly
They act like particles 
No they don't exactly
  
[Stephen Hawking]
We need a theory of everything 
Which is still just beyond our grasp 
We need a theory of everything, perhaps 
The ultimate triumph of science
(refrain) 

[Feynman]
 I gotta stop somewhere I'll leave you something to imagine
Sience


Monday, August 08, 2011

Conceptions of the Free Will

Concepts and conceptions of the Free Will - Part I.

Do we have a free will? Are our decisions mainly controlled by our conscious self (free will) or by our unconscious self? Or do we only think, or have the feeling, that our choices and decisions are made by our conscious self? Is conscious choice just an illusion? Can our conscious self influence our unconscious self? Do we have a free will or is everything predetermined? The concept of the free will is, at least for me, an intriguing topic from a philosophical and scientific point of view. After posting the blogs Lateral Thinking (by far the most popular) and Serendipity I do think it's about time for another one in the series related to thoughts and thinking: the Free Will. An overview about topics related to Thinking can be found at the Thinking Portal.


Passage (see also Scientific American: Free Will versus the Programmed Brain) in a popular science book by Francis Crick (co-discoverer of the DNA double helix): 
“‘You,’ your joys and your sorrows, your memories and your ambitions, your sense of personal identity and free will, are in fact no more than the behavior of a vast assembly of nerve cells and their associated molecules. Who you are is nothing but a pack of neurons.…although we appear to have free will, in fact, our choices have already been predetermined for us and we cannot change that.” 


Wired: Brain Scanners Can See Your Decisions Before You Make Them
This schematic shows the brain regions (green) from which the outcome of a participant's decision can be predicted before it is made

The concept:

Citations from Wikipedia:
Wikipedia (Free Will): "Free will is the apparent ability to make choices free from certain kinds of constraints"
Wikipedia (Neuroscience of Free Will): "Neuroscience of free will refers to recent neuroscientific investigations shedding light on the question of free will, which is a philosophical and scientific question as to whether, and in what sense, rational agents exercise control over their actions or decisions. The principle of free will has religious, ethical, and scientific implications.
One significant finding of several studies is that a person's brain seems to commit to certain decisions before the person becomes aware of having made them. Early studies found delays of about half a second; with contemporary brain scanning technology, scientists in 2008 were able to predict with 60% accuracy whether subjects would press a button with their left or right hand up to 10 seconds before the subject became aware of having made that choice. These findings may not be sufficient to contradict free will, as it would be quite likely that a large range of cognitive operations are necessary to freely press a button.
Another proposed explanation is a 'forward model of motor control'. The idea is that our conscious self does not cause all behaviours. Instead, the conscious self is alerted (through various sensations) to behaviours that the rest of the brain and body are already planning and performing. To be clear, this model does not deny that consciousness affects behaviour; it does not forbid conscious experience from being used as input by unconscious processes - information that might modify a behaviour in progress. The key is that the unconscious processes play a much larger role in behaviour. This model thus challenges some conceptions of free will, since self awareness may only recognize a feeling of will, which appears before an action."


Unconscious and Conscious Self:

The Dutch columnist Roos Vonk has a balanced, thoughtful and fresh point of view about the free will as she demonstrated in her column. A translation by me is briefly summarized below.
It would be interesting to find out whether our decisions are controlled by our conscious self (free will) or by our unconscious (subconscious) self. In this respect, research results from monitoring brainactivity suggest that, whatever you are planning to do, the decision was already made in your brain long before you have the impression that you made the decision yourself. 
Thus, the order is: 1) decision (brains), 2) awareness of the decision and at the same time 3) acting. Because 1) is unconsious and 2) is always accompanied by 3), it feels as if we decide just before acting. 
However, choices are made mainly by our unconscious self. In fact the majority (95%) of what we do is mainly unconscious. This suggests that people don't have a free will: we have the illusion that we make our choices by ourselves, but decisions are made by unconscious motives, that in turn are influenced by social, genetic and environmental factors that we even can't control ourselves. Actually, we don't always need these conscious considerations, because the real decisions are not made consciously at all. This does not imply we don't have a free will at all or contradict free will. More important is that our conscious self is running behind the facts. Nevertheless, we are able to deliver input to our unconscious self. Our unconscious self is not controlled only by genetic or other forces, but also by our own conscious thoughts which in turn can influence an unconscious decision. Even if only 1% of the decisions are made consciously, it will be of significant and essential importance for our self.


Conscious choice and the free will. An illusion?:

In the blog BrainBlogger the 'button-press' experiment is criticized. In addition, the functions of the unconscious and conscious minds are quite well explained as follows. The conscious and unconscious minds interact and fulfill different tasks. Simple or well-learned tasks, like habits or ingrained prejudices, are controlled by the unconscious mind, whereas tasks that are more complex or novel, like new learning are processed by the conscious mind, the unconscious/subconscious mind has not yet had a chance to learn. The free will mediates in what we do want to learn. In this respect, the existence of the free will can't be ruled out. From this it can be concluded that the free will is not an illusion.


Stimulating the free will: 

From a column in Lifehacker: "Having free will depends on whether or not you believe you have it. According to a recent study published in Psychological Science, when you deny the existence of free will you're actually hindering your brain's ability to perform voluntary action. If you're feeling like you're not in control of your actions, it may be worth reaffirming your belief in voluntary action. Maybe it'll make the difference."


Examples dealing with choice: 

  • Surprisingly, voting for a political candidate is independent of the free will and rationality. The decision is made within a split second and is mainly determined by the first impression of the candidate's face. Whether or not it does look reliable enough for the voter is by far the most important criterium.  Thus, the choice is not based on the election program or other rational considerations, but based on the impression at first sight. However, it does feel if we do have conscious control over our choice, but it in fact it's only a choice made unconsciously.
    Note:
    Can agree that the very first impression is important for preference. However, our decision can be reconsidered in time by conscious experiences e.g. if we gather more cognitive information.

  • Faqt: It will take only a millisecond for men to judge a woman, but the other way around it takes much longer. A man searching for a potential partner decides within a second whether he likes or prefers a particular woman and the decision depends mainly on the looks. Man can get instant information from a woman's body and face, such as potential fertility. For women it takes longer to make a choice. They will judge men on loyalty, character and futureplans. With this information they seem to be able to estimate whether a man will possibly commit to her and her children.
    Note:

    Do think that the explanation above is highly implausible.
    Can't imagine that a man can instantly judge a woman's fertility. In that case women could, when in doubt, then just ask any man to get a reliable answer about her fertility, a medical examination would then be unnecessary. 


Personal comments: 

One should be skeptical about the interpretations from the flawed 'button-press' experiment. Extrapolating from such an experiment to all mental life is not justified. The 60% prediction accuracy is significant, but only 10% more than fifty-fifty. Nonetheless, it's remarkable that decisions can be made before we are aware of the decision. The timegap mentioned in the experiment could probably be needed for neuron transport through the brain nerves to the 'self awareness' part of the brain. Choices and decisions are mainly made by our unconscious self, our conscious self (awareness) is running behind the facts.  
Personally, I do believe we do have a free will. Choices or decisions are at least influenced by our conscious Self. Our unconscious self is controlled by our own conscious thoughts which in turn can influence an unconscious decision. This point of view is based on the following findings. The conscious and unconscious minds interact and fulfill different tasks. Furthermore, our conscious mind can influence our unconscious mind by experiences from environmental factors. These factors are to some extent (or at least not marginal) influenced by our conscious self. Therefore, the findings do not necessarily contradict free will.
Moreover, learning and reasoning are complex and novel tasks that are controlled by our conscious mind, because the unconscious mind has not yet had a chance to 'learn'. The free will mediates in what we do want to learn. In this perspective, we can assume that not everything is predetermined and that Free Will is NOT an illusion.

Nature News: Neuroscience vs Philosophy, Taking Aim At Free Will:  
Scientists think they can prove that free will is an illusion. Philosophers are urging them to think again