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    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeMay 8th 2008 edited
     
    squapple mentioned this pretty good TED talk by Brian Cox on CERN: 53 MB mp4

    i actually have dreams about being inside the particle accelerator. heh.. i tutor teens in math and physics. am a nerd, yes.

    ATLAS is done. CERN is ready to rock.

    to get an idea about what's involved, check this out (the sequels are sidebarred as "related". i recommend you watch them all.


    ATLAS:

    •  
      CommentAuthorsquapple
    • CommentTimeMay 9th 2008
     
    NNNNIIIIIIIICE THREAD ;)
    •  
      CommentAuthormeska
    • CommentTimeMay 9th 2008
     
    Awesome, thanks for the info. Mini black holes and Stranglets... we could turn into a dark star?!
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeMay 9th 2008
     
    yup.. don't zig when you should zag, ok?

    here's a sweet simple fizzix-ish vid.



    per Huygen's principle of pendulums.
    •  
      CommentAuthorbaseisdead
    • CommentTimeMay 10th 2008 edited
     
    Didn't that same kinda thing happen on that foot bridge in london? but with people walking, the more the bridge swayed the more they walked in step, and the more the bridge swayed.
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeMay 10th 2008
     
    :) yesyes base.

    the net effect of small changes. in the case of the foot bridge, i think it was lateral momentum. a transfer of kinetic energy happened.

    i read about a traffic bridge in the USA that went down when the wind started it swaying, and i know that stadiums are at risk for that kind of synchronization.

    i bet our architect friends know this one well.
    •  
      CommentAuthorsquapple
    • CommentTimeMay 12th 2008
     
    the oscillation of the millennium bridge
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeMay 13th 2008 edited
     
    Lenz' Law.

    supercooling + magnet = levitation


    the YouTube vid was copied from the Superconducting Lab at the University of Oslo
    •  
      CommentAuthorchris
    • CommentTimeMay 13th 2008
     
    gallopin' gertie


    millenium bridge
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeMay 13th 2008
     
    holy cow

    the motor bridge Tacoma Narrows.. awesome that it stayed together for so long, i think. just.. wow.


    the lateral movement of the millenium bridge doesn't look as scarey, but i'd have been off that thing as fast as my little feet could carry me.

    whooo.. easy to see why people "found" the periodicity of the sway and used it to stay upright. eek
  1.  
    the millenium bridge was behaving within tolerance - the sorry end to the story was they installed dampers that makes it a less pure but 'perceptually' safer structure
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeMay 13th 2008
     
    i looked at the math. within tolerance? perhaps on paper. :D

    the calculations for the diff forces is pretty cool to look at... :D on paper. heh

    maybe it wouldn't have fallen down. i'm very interested in the phenomenon of a structure's movement forcing people to "walk this way". people seem to automatically find that moment of inertia.
  2.  
    i work at one end of it - i would have liked it to stay wobbly
  3.  
    the Tacoma Narrows bridge video is amazing.

    and Mick - the levitating magnet is awesome.


    fisix is the one thing i'm not good at understanding. all the same, I love the vids, keep em coming.
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeMay 27th 2008 edited
     
    radioastronomy is a branch of physics that fascinates me. the actual "how", as much as the stunning results that we get to feast our eyes on.



    you are seeing a manmade object falling gracefully and with INTENT to the surface of an alien world, seen by another manmade object already circling that world, both acting robotically, and both hundreds of million of kilometers away.

    never, ever forget: we did this. this is what we can do. :)

    the nations of the world have a fleet of vehicles exploring Mars.

    In orbit:
    °ESA's Mars Express.
    °NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.
    °NASA's Mars Odyssey.

    On the ground:
    °Spirit, near the equator.
    °Opportunity, also near the equator on the opposite side of Mars.
    °Now Phoenix, above the arctic circle.

    those on the ground can communicate with the orbiters, and regularly use them to relay data to Earth. imaging from the orbiters is used to plan and understand where the rovers are going. it's real exploration. on a very big planet, but it's a start.

    we can do other difficult things.






    a couple of years ago, we had a big astronomy faire (visiting phamus astrophysicist, blah blah) . i put together a display and activity center on the Chandra (next generation after Hubble) satellite.

    here's a pdf of the little booklet i made about the satellite (it accompanied the talk i gave...used keynote, NOT powerpoint!!).

    Chandra_The Satellite


    :)
    • CommentAuthorBiff
    • CommentTimeMay 27th 2008
     
    Mankind is a bunch of pussies. "Oh no, people might DIE going into space" No shit, sherlock!

    Fuck you, the lot of you. Yeah, of COURSE people die in the course of space exploration. I bet more people died within 150 miles of you from traffic yesterday, than died in any single space accident.

    Mankind on a solitary rock, orbiting a non-remarkable yellow star out here in a distant arm of the milky way can be wiped the fuck out by any solitary event. Gamma ray burst, wandering black hole, Big Fucking Rock (TM and C BiffCo, incidentally, and pronounced like you're a big movie trailer announcement guy), Idiocy of our earthbound neighbors.

    Not spending the money to figure out Space is a really bad idea.
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      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeMay 27th 2008
     
    :)

    good rant, maestro.

    i concur. (heh.. had to re-read to make sure who i'm "fuck-you"ing.)

    you might like my Chandra paper, Biff. i focused on the "how". it has specs.. (lure).
    •  
      CommentAuthorsquapple
    • CommentTimeMay 27th 2008
     
    mick, i can't get to your Chandra paper, i get an 'We're sorry' dot Mac page :awkward:
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeMay 27th 2008
     
    link fixed, thanx, squapz. i forgot the suffix on the file.

    "paper" may be giving it too much credit. :)


    x
    •  
      CommentAuthorsquapple
    • CommentTimeMay 27th 2008
     
    I'll check it out when finish this job ;)
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeMay 28th 2008 edited
     
    if you like paper toys, there's a pdf plan for the Chandra satellite available.
    courtesy of Harvard U.
    •  
      CommentAuthorsquapple
    • CommentTimeJun 11th 2008
     
    Hey Mick !

    I watched a fascinating documentary last night about the race to zero kelvin.

    Its amazing what has happened since I studied physics, I wasn't aware of the Bose Einstein condensate until I watched this. Amazing !
    •  
      CommentAuthormeska
    • CommentTimeJun 11th 2008
     
    This thread is facking oarsome!
    •  
      CommentAuthorsquapple
    • CommentTimeJun 11th 2008
     
    physics is fun !
    •  
      CommentAuthorbaseisdead
    • CommentTimeJun 12th 2008
     
    so is biology, phnar phnar
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeJun 12th 2008
     
    phsyics is oarsome, yesyes!

    and fun, to boot.

    the Bose-Einstein condensate work is fucking amazing, squapz. it's woowoo spin-my-brain fodder. :D

    superatoms, groups of atoms behaving as one. slowing of light speed. frictionless flow. the ability to measure more accurately than ever before (mighty useful in planning space flight, imo). cutting edge, to be sure.

    20 years ago, people were admiring the work with lasers, while saying "what real use is it?" same thing with the BEC. the possiblities are exciting.

    the math ... think about multiple pages of nothing but complexly interrelated constants. i'm distantly aquainted with Gil Summy, a physicist who is working on (as he puts it) "measuring how we might measure what we want to measure". i just nod. heh

    a cool story is that when they were first trying to cool atoms down far enough, they'd get to a certain point and the small amounts of heat generated when an atom flips its polarity (a usual event) was enough to prevent further cooling. :) that's when they started adding magnets.
    • CommentAuthorBiff
    • CommentTimeJun 12th 2008
     
    •  
      CommentAuthorsquapple
    • CommentTimeJun 12th 2008
     
    yes, this was all covered.

    Using rubidium atoms, they managed to get within a couple of billionths of 0 kelvin and they highlighted the point that just 1 atom could corrupt the whole process by simply moving ! Scary.

    I saw the slowing of light experiment as well, I cant remember which element they used but they made a cigar like condensate and fired light through it and it slowed it by about a billion times ! The point was raised "why not just fire it at a brick wall and it will stop?" but then there is no information leaving the mass to record the data, simple as that ! So why not just create a bose einstien condensate instead !! I'd love to be a physicist.
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeJun 12th 2008
     
    squapple said...yes, this was all covered.


    you could have told more, and saved me displaying my ignorance. HEH! for once. (teasing squappi)

    base said...so is biology, phnar phnar


    biology is totally fascinating and fun, especially micro (for me), but then i've had the privilege of actually taking some biology classes. physics wasn't part of my nursing curriculum other than the basics (a math course, not a real physics lab). if your phnar is the equivalent of a wink and a nod, then i still agree. biology + physics (bouncy bouncy) is more than fun; it's essential. :p


    Biff.. that little physics game is sweet and fun. i just lost 15 minutes. *bookmarked*

    x
    •  
      CommentAuthornimmot
    • CommentTimeJun 13th 2008
     
    that game rocks biff! :)
    •  
      CommentAuthormichael
    • CommentTimeJun 16th 2008
     
    thanks for the time waster, biff :)
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeJun 16th 2008
     
    yeah.. i've sent that to several people of all ages.

    i'm going to "use" it, too.

    it's better than Phun, though less complex. Phun is only a beta, but it's hard to easily understand how to use it.

    Biff has good taste in games. who'd a thunk? :D
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeJun 18th 2008
     
    i found a YouTube vid demoing Phun. it shows some of how the commands work. that's helpful.

    •  
      CommentAuthorchris
    • CommentTimeJun 20th 2008
     
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeJun 20th 2008
     
    wow

    awe-inspiring, and totally beautiful. their offices are very cool, even without orange. ::)

    i've a "friend" who's a little spacey, and new-agey. she's one of those who says they can read and interpret auras. i once showed her a pic of a magnetic field without telling her what it was... and yup..

    we see so much more than we pay attention to.

    thank you chris. i watched that 4 times. solar flares are a little easier for me to imagine now.
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeJun 22nd 2008
     
    damper ball

    the world’s largest ‘tuned mass damper’ and sits near the top of the world’s largest completed skyscraper on earth


    damper gif

    it can reduce the building’s movement by up to 40%.


    lots more, including a vid, on the taipei 101 in taiwan, courtesy of Deputy Dog.
    •  
      CommentAuthorVe.
    • CommentTimeJun 22nd 2008
     
    wow. How cool is THAT!
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeJun 23rd 2008
     
    i want to ride it, me. *nod*
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeJun 29th 2008
     
    game

    Poiser :) so ya wanna be an engineer?

    (this is harder than i thought it would be.)
    • CommentAuthorBiff
    • CommentTimeJun 30th 2008
     
    I understand the risk management of the particle colliders don't think there's any chance of creating a black hole ripping apart space and time anymore.

    Kind of a drag, if you ask me.
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeJun 30th 2008
     
    :) i like drama, too.
    •  
      CommentAuthormeska
    • CommentTimeJul 3rd 2008 edited
     
    Cern

    Brilliant Guardian Special on Cern featuring an interview with Higgs...

    Higgs

    ...and Chris Morris!
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeJul 4th 2008
     
    :D cool beans, meska.

    i'm copying the urls, so i can go read later.


    lately, i've been reading about chirality.....the direction that things twine, from polarized light to DNA. fascinating.
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeJul 7th 2008
     
    i enjoyed those articles, mesk. :)

    i'm really rather excited about the possibility of identifying the Higgs boson. Finding it would confirm that we really do understand the origin of mass, and complete the electro-weak theory, filling in one the few remaining gaps in a "unified field" theory...... there are so many pieces that would fall into place if that was to happen. ;) several years ago, bookies (Ladbroke's) were giving CERN a 6:1 possiblity of finding it. dunno what the oddsmakers are up to now.

    This graphic is about the known. it would be very cool if it were out-of-date by next year.








    click through for a MUCH bigger poster. i have this on my upstairs landing wall, atm. :) wall is unpainted "particle board". i felt it was the right spot.
    •  
      CommentAuthorsquapple
    • CommentTimeJul 8th 2008
     
    Nice, Mick. I like what you did there with ;)
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeJul 20th 2008
     
    Four poems about string theory (found at the Short Sharp Science Blog).


    String Theory, by Dave Morrison

    Thousands of lives are being
    spent trying to construct an
    Explanation of Everything, six

    extra dimensions, parallel universes,
    the whole overloaded wagon held
    together with tiny bits of string.

    String?

    Why not tiny jacks, or tiny crescent
    wrenches or tiny dandelions, or tiny
    charm bracelets, or tiny umbrellas, or

    tiny teacups, or tiny disco balls, or
    tiny rubber bands, paper clips?
    Our Universe is as it is because of

    tiny hoops of twine? This
    is what you get from too much
    coffee and a 'what if'-

    When my friends and I considered
    such possibilities behind the
    cafeteria with a nickel bag of

    lame weed, it did not occur
    to us that we were budding physicists;
    we were burnouts
    trying to get comfortable with

    mystery.

    --

    String Theory, by Bruce Holland Rogers

    1. The Eleventh Dimension

    No one had direct experience of the extra dimensions, so learning about them at age six was difficult even for genetically enhanced superchildren. Child-friendly names were devised. This helped. Children learned that the eleven dimensions were Length, Width, Height, Time, Happy, Sneezy, Dopey, Grumpy, Sleepy, Doc, and???Even with the new names, one dimension was hard to remember. Even for genetically enhanced superchildren, the universe was not without mystery.

    2. Recipe for a Theory of Everything

    Start with a figurine of turtles stacked one on top of another and an excellent hammer. Smash the turtles. Smash the pieces, and keep smashing. Pound the dust into atoms. Smash the atoms into protons. Keep smashing down to quarks and gluons. You're close to the theory of everything. Pound everything into strings. Keep pounding. After strings, turtles. Pound, pound, pound. Smaller and smaller turtles, all the way down.

    3. But Maybe She Just Couldn't Knit

    Wanda had been about to defend her superstring dissertation when the universe gave its answer. Broken strings littered the floors of physics departments everywhere. "But they were so pretty!" she cried.

    She drank.

    Later, she picked herself up. She went to AA meetings. She spun her old strings into yarn, knitted the yarn into a sweater and wore it to a meeting. Everyone who saw it started drinking again.

    --

    Building Blocks, by Robert Borski

    Morons are not elementary particles,
    birds do not quark, and half-
    dead cats fail to constitute roadkill.

    On the other hand
    silly string may underpin much
    of the universe, and in
    the toychest of infinities
    both larger and smaller sets can be
    found side by side.

    God as a boy must have been
    a strange child, if not actually gifted.

    --
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeJul 20th 2008
     
    Raise It Up in the Mind of Me: One Poem, Eleven1 Footnotes2, by Jeff P. Jones

    Women have small taste for the sea.3 ??? Melville4

    But there's that overnight ferry5 between Stockholm and Helsinki
    she took by herself. Tucked into a sleeping bag against the cold wind,
    the hum of giant engines at her back, she saw a shattered burst of light,6

    red and white and gold7 crawling across the night sky. She pulls
    another shot of espresso, glances at the gray snow8
    falling and the mediocrity-worshiping world. If she moved

    further west, even Portland or Seattle, she would be closer.
    Snow in this land-locked place brings a special anxiety.9
    Each layer a covering. Unstoppable. Inevitable.

    It's beginning to stick, and the boy10 who makes love to her
    will soon step through the door and knock snow from his coat.
    He'll look up and with a smile breaking his face say, Hey.11

    1 String theory posits up to eleven dimensions. This goes beyond high school trigonometry. At least one of these dimensions blurs at the speed of a plucked guitar string, becomes uniformly invisible and able to inhabit more space than it ought.
    2 This poem was originally titled "The Special Anxiety Brought By Snow."
    3 It takes twelve seconds to handwrite this line.
    4 Another three for this one.
    5 Screen is black. We HEAR a woman's voice. We can sense her compassion, her deep emotional reservoir.
    6 In southern Colorado there are rocks that catch fire when struck by lightning.
    7 Golden bits of titanium carved from the shoulder of a Russian satellite.
    8 Picture here a duck's body, egg-white, loose as a fallen tree branch, somersaulting through the water.
    9 Me at my most neurotic: Please don't think of me as a ghost. I myself am afraid of ghosts because they don't like me, they laugh at me, they hate me, they think I'm stupid, they see right through me.
    10 Dale Evers could have been a glam-cowboy success in the tradition of Roy Rogers and Gene Autry. On one shoot, the whole cast was bused out to a desert location. Dale was miffed. Yet a young Indian woman caught his eye and he chatted her up. She'll make this week worth my while, he thought.
    11 Some people believe that sound never dies but continues to reverberate. A conversation from twenty years ago might still be in this room, bounding off the walls. I want to believe this.
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeJul 31st 2008
     
    The Large Hadrom Collider Countdown Timer. :) right now, it's at 7 days, 12 hours, 36 minutes.

    *shiver in anticipation* i'm getting excited.
    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeJul 31st 2008 edited
     
    the Large Hadron Rap.

    posted with the vid is this: "Don't ask me what went wrong with the sound.".

    it doesn't matter. it has a good beat and you can dance to it. *nod*


    •  
      CommentAuthormick
    • CommentTimeAug 1st 2008
     
    COUNTDOWN:

    6 days, 12 hours, 36 minutes




    The ALICE Inner Tracking System during its transport in the experimental cavern and its insertion into the Time Projection Chamber (TPC). ALICE (A Large Ion Collider Experiment @ CERN) will study the physics of ultrahigh-energy proton-proton and lead-lead collisions and will explore conditions in the first instants of the universe, a few microseconds after the Big Bang.



    click the cropped photo for more wonderful pics from The BIg Picture.


    good article today in the Economist: Physics | Known and unknown. (lure: it has pictures)


    :)