Thursday, May 30, 2013

Bio-Geo

 
 
 
 
 

 






Monday, May 27, 2013

Friday, May 24, 2013

Unsung

The history of rocketry is yet to be written. To this day, rocket science is a joke
which arises in the context of ' dumb and dumber'  jokes. Indeed, there are
difficulties.

Robert Goddard(1882-1945), the first to build a liquid-fuel rocket, considered his work
in the following terms: "...the dream of yesterday is the hope of today and the reality of
tomorrow."  A German pioneer, Herman Oberth(1894-1989) was an avid reader of Jules
Verne, and came to the idea of a multi-stage rocket at 14. His phd thesis was later refused
as being too 'utopian'. This is what he had to say about the educational system:  "Our
educational system is like an automobile which has strong rear lights, brightly illuminating
the past. But looking forward, things are barely discernible."

The first true rocket, built during World War II, was a ballistic missile the - V2 - an engine of
destruction used against Allied forces. It was built thanks to Wernher von Braun(1912-1977),
a team of scientists from many countries, and the assembly-line skills of the workers of a
concentration camp, Dora-Mittelbau. The prototype picured below was painted with checker-
board squares so that the team could eye-ball it during flight to monitor if it rolled. It was
launched in 1943.

There are surely lessons to be learnt from this complex history as, today, some of the
least reasonable among us are packing their bags for Mars. It beats being stuck in traffic.

source: Wikipedia

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Hail

source: Wikipedia


Tornadoes(what)

Excerpt from a Le Monde 2011 article
translation: doxa-louise

How do tornadoes form?
Tornadoes are swirling wind tunnels of extreme violence, which form

at the base of a storm cloud (cumulonimbus) and sometimes reaching the

ground. They are the result of a meeting of the cold air of the high troposphere

and warm and humid air from lower atmospheric strata. The two air masses do not

mix but roll one around the other, thus creating strong winds. In cases of variations

in the strength and direction of winds, at different altitudes - what are called

wind shearings - , the storm disturbances experience strong rotation, creating a whirl.


What is their intensity?
In general, tornadoes last ten minutes, move at the speed of the storm, between 50

and 100 kms/hour. The diameter of the vortex vaccilates between some tens and some

hundreds of meters. But in extreme cases, winds can go up to 500kms/hour and the tuba

several kilometers in length. Tornadoes can then last for hours. They are measured on the

Fujita scale, established in 1971, as a function of the damage inflicted on human constructs

more than the strength of winds. Tornadoes are thus classified as F0, which induces light

damages, up to F5, where projected débris are extremely dangerous and where winds can

rise to 500 kms/hour, with dramatic consequences.


Why do these often occur in the United States?
The United States experience every year some 1 000 tornadoes. These are formed because of

the meeting in Spring of cold and dry currents from the North Pole at some ten kilometers in

altitude, and warm and moist currents from the Gulf of Mexico, at much lower altitudes.

The presence of the Rocky Mountains, in the west, produces as well an ondulation of the Jet

Stream - a very rapid current at ten kilometers of altitude - favorable to storm disturbances

on the Great Plains.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Bernoulli Principle


How tornadoes formThe U.S. experiences the most of any country. They occur on average 1,000 times and kill 60 people per year, mostly in two regions -- Florida and the so-called "Tornado Alley," the area between the Rocky and Appalachian Mountains. But they've been recorded in all 50 states, usually between late winter and mid-summer.
No one knows what forms a tornado, but scientists agree on a few general points. The most common tornadoes come from rotating thunderstorms, called supercells.
In a supercell, the updraft of warm air rotates counter-clockwise in the northern hemisphere, reaching speeds of up to 175 mph and forcing cool air to descend. The updraft can pull cool moist air -- which would ordinarily fall from clouds -- back up into the sky. The saturated air then condenses to form a rotating wall of clouds, typically toward the back of a cloud in rain-free zones.
With enough strength, the spinning effect creates a funnel, hits the ground and creates a tornado that can last several seconds to more than an hour. Damage can range from superficial, such as roof damage from a falling tree, to completely sweeping away a structure, leaving only the foundation.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/05/21/tornado-primer-earths-violent-storms/#ixzz2TyuoDpbb

SOI

The Scripps Institute is a reliable source of information and understanding on the CO2 Climate question. The little film above shows how seasonal the release of CO2 in the atmosphere is.

http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/ccgg/trends/history.html

Monday, May 20, 2013

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Insulting!!


Nothing insults me more than being lied to by a statistic.  It may well be that
85% of women whose mothers have died of a geneticly-linked breast
cancer have gone on to develop the disease.  But those afflicted mothers may
have shared other characteristics, such as being obese, or alcoholic, or living
in the rust belt. Daughters need to compare themselves to the population as whole,
and the genetic risk should be weighted.  In my humble opinion.

Linking illnesses to genes is tricky business. Genes code for proteins, but
variability can take many forms. There are a few illnesses where failiure
to perform may build up toxins.  But failiure to protect sounds like a racket
to me.

 Pour rappel, le gène BRCA1 est associé à un risque majoré de 70% de cancer du sein et de 40% de l'ovaire avant 70 ans

The above, from a Figaro article on the breast cancer genes, alleges that the 
presence of these gens marks up the risk by 70%; it is not, by itself, a near
certainty.

http://sante.lefigaro.fr/actualite/2010/09/01/10390-cancer-sein-benefices-chirurgie-preventive?position=6&keyword=mastectomie

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Best of Mothers'




Housman

My current Web ambles have led me, de fil en aiguille, to discover the Engligh poet A.E. Housman(1859-
1936). Here is his most famous poem, published in 1896, à frais d'auteur.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Pizza rules!


Parisian restaurants now sell pizza by weight - just like in Rome - and allow one to
eat in-house or box it to take out.


Above a picture taken at Slize, ave de la République.    

Endorheic





Monday, May 6, 2013

Rivers


The Rivers of Jannah (Paradise)
source: Wikipedia and Google Maps

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Chocolate Heaven



The word is out on chocolate. Dark chocolate confections contain

more fat; in effect, a chocolate bar is made up of cocoa powder,

cocoa butter and sugar. Dark chocolate contains more powder and more butter

to go with it. It does contain less sugar, and one is less tempted

to overeat. Milk chocolate incorporates milk, which means less of the

nutrients of chocolate, and some of those of milk.







 
 
 
Theobroma cacao was, for the Mayans, food for the Gods. The Aztecs, in turn, took it with

them to Mexico. The Spaniards changed the way it was consumed, adding sugar and

cinnamon. Indeed, cocoa may well have been what motivated introducing sugar

plants to America ( and eventually exporting slavery-based culture back to South-East Asia).

Today, it's candy.
 
 

Friday, May 3, 2013

Jabir


source: French language Wikipedia.

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Stochiometrics

source: chimix.com



Perez,


Stop that, you're hallucinating!


Here's how the reg'la guys on Facebook have it down:


LOL




Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Chez Tim ¬(Horton)



Not everyone's idea of a good time is the same. Below is a page from the fist web server ever
which was housed on Time Werner Lee's personnal computer at CERN. The rubics are a little,
er, austere: Astrophysics and the King James Bible. Yet it was the birth of the Web and
the gamer community is forever thankful. Happy May Day!


Today the Web is an awesome element in our lives, enabling (me, at least), an easy access
to information and understanding.

On the subject of awesome, that is the meaning of Grozny, the Chechen capital, named
after Ivan the Terrible. Grozny is terrible, formidable i.e. - and it just occured to me
this morning - awesome. Interestingly, Ivan was the first Russian leader to wear the title
of Tsar, which means King, and he was crowned such at age three. Up to that time,
Russian leaders had been Grand Princes, indicating that the leader was yet one of many
princes. In Western countries, grand princes may be siblings of the King, but that is
a different uage. Below is a map of Russia, found on Wiki. I have indicated Moscow, Dagestan and
Chechnya.