Monthly Archives: June 2013

The Peculiar Case of Bilbo and Khan

I have been watching season one of Sherlock, a modern version of Sherlock Holmes.  I must admit to a bit of a Sherlock Holmes addiction.  I have read the complete works, watched the horrible old films, watched the great Jeremy Brett series twice, watched the cool new movies, watch Elementary regularly, have seen Young Sherlock Holmes, read the 7 percent solution and watched the movie – now Sherlock!  I still love the Jeremy Brett series best, even better than the original books.

sherlock

However, I had the strangest moment in watching Sherlock.  First, the lead, Benedict Cumberpatch, who plays Sherlock is now the one who plays Khan in Star Trek: Into Darkness.  He does a pretty awesome job acting in both.  The strangest part is that Dr. Watson is played by Martin Freeman, who also plays Bilbo Baggins in the new Hobbit movie series.  Again, he does an awesome job in both.  Now I loved Star Trek: Into Darkness without any reservations, but The Hobbit: The Unexpected Journey was an overlong indulgence in making one third of a book into the length of two movies.  It should have been called The Hobbit: No scenes were deleted or cut even though they should have been.

One can debate whether Cumberpatch or Freeman got the better parts to play.  Khan is a cooler character but Bilbo gets at least a three movie deal.  The funniest part was watching Sherlock, and I kid you not, Freeman has to fight a Golem.  Now a golem is a mythical enforcer type, originally created in Jewish stories about a rabbi that makes a giant clay creature come to life to avenge his people.  In the TV show Sherlock, the Golem is a very scary hitman, played I believe, by the same person that played the creepy chained up monster in 300 that cuts Leonidas helmet.  But Golem and Gollum are pronounced the same.

watson fights golem

Dr. Watson fights Golem – Sherlock

Imagine my wonder and delight at seeing Bilbo (as Watson) yelling at Golem, “Hey Golem, stop or I’ll shoot you!” Then duking it out.  I really want to know if at the time of this first season in 2010, they all knew that Freeman would be playing Bilbo and put this whole thing is as an hilarious insider gag.  Does anyone know?  I would love to find out for sure.  Kudos in any event, it was very funny.

bilbo and gollum

Bilbo Baggins and Gollum

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Our Sun Has a Huge Hole In It

There’s a hole in the sun, NASA says

By Ian O’Neill

Published June 04, 2013

Discovery News

  • Coronal hole May.jpg
    NASA/SDO
  • Coronal Hole May 2.jpg
    NASA/SDO
During the latter part of last week, a huge void rotated across the face of the sun.
But never fear, it isn’t a sign of the “end times” or some weird sci-fi stellar malnourishment: This particular hole is a coronal hole. Though it may be a well-known phenomenon, it is noteworthy — it’s the largest coronal hole to be observed in the sun’s atmosphere for over a year.

Snapped through three of NASA Solar Dynamics Observatory‘s (SDO) extreme ultraviolet filters, this coronal hole is caused by a low density region of hot plasma.

The sun’s lower corona is threaded with powerful magnetic fields. Some are looped — or “closed” — very low in the corona, creating the beautiful, bright coronal loops that trap superheated gases that generate vast amounts of extreme ultraviolet light, radiation that is produced by multimillion degree plasma (the bright regions in the image, top).

However, there are also “open” field lines that have one end of their magnetic flux anchored in the solar photosphere. These lines fire solar plasma into interplanetary space at an accelerated rate, often intensifying space weather conditions. These regions of open field lines, or coronal holes, act like fire hoses, blasting plasma into space. These regions are the source of the the fast solar wind that accelerates solar material toward Earth, which often only takes 2-3 days to travel from the sun to Earth.

Through the SDO’s eyes, coronal holes appear dark as there is a very low density of the multimillion degree plasma generating the EUV radiation. And as this dramatic observation demonstrates, to the eyes of the SDO, the sun really does appear to have a hole.

We are currently going through an uptick in solar activity as our nearest star experiences “solar maximum” — the peak of its natural 11-year cycle. At this time, we can expect an increased frequency of solar flares and coronal mass ejections as the sun’s magnetic field becomes increasingly stressed. Although this solar maximum is less active than predicted, it is producing some powerful flares and CME’s. 

Now we’re seeing huge coronal holes, all a consequence of the twisted turmoil our sun is currently enduring.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/06/04/there-hole-in-sun-nasa-says/?intcmp=features#ixzz2VJuHzoVj

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Floating Church from 1849

1849:

The Floating Church of the Redeemer

“View of the floating Episcopal church, built 1849. Shows the church on pontoons in the Delaware harbor. The church moored at the foot of Dock Street until reconsecrated to a New Jersey parish in 1853 and placed on a brick foundation. Building burned 1868.”

The-Floating-Church-of-the-Redeemer-620x786

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Movie Killer Body Count Comparison

Which of the horror villains took the most lives?  (click to enlarge)  Michael Meyers vs. Freddy Krueger vs. Jason

 

movie body counts

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Original Art by Bent Objects

UPDATE: The Return of Bent Objects

Wires transform these objects from inanimate to hilarious works of art.

Little polish girl

McDonalds as Sculpture Materials

Yeah, this is where those come from

Dancing Queens

English breakfast

Sylvia Muffin put her head in the oven.

The introvert

Bananas in bed – let’s slip into bed together

You Say Tomato, I Say Tomahto. You Say Potatoes, I say Zombies.

Fruit with life experience

Zombies are nuts about brains

Modest pear

Literary interpretations

Paper training our little dog, Frank

 

A little cat doodle

Photo Credits: Terry Border at Bent Objects

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Steampunk Aircrew

The latest installment of Steampunk Aircrew.  You are outfitting a new airship, who do you hire as crew.  The following are some applicants.  Choose wisely as you cannot afford them all.  Do you want to fight for the Queen?  for Freedom?  Be a merchant, a pirate, an explorer or a conqueror?  (For previous posts, type “Steampunk Aircrew” into the search block on my home page.)

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Rover radiation data poses manned Mars mission dilemma

Rover radiation data poses manned Mars mission dilemma

Art work of humans on the surface of Mars
A single mission to Mars is going to take the astronauts close to or beyond their current career limits for radiation exposure. Scientists say getting to Mars as quickly as possible would lower the risks

Nasa’s Curiosity rover has confirmed what everyone has long suspected – that astronauts on a Mars mission would get a big dose of damaging radiation.

The robot counted the number of high-energy space particles striking it on its eight-month journey to the planet.

Based on this data, scientists say a human travelling to and from Mars could well be exposed to a radiation dose that breached current safety limits.

This calculation does not even include time spent on the planet’s surface.

When the time devoted to exploring the world is taken into account, the dose rises further still.

This would increase the chances of developing a fatal cancer beyond what is presently deemed acceptable for a career astronaut.

Cary Zeitlin from the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, and colleagues report the Curiosity findings in the latest edition ofScience magazine.

They say engineers will have to give careful consideration to the type of shielding that is built into a Mars-bound crew ship. However, they concede that for some of the most damaging radiation particles, there may be little that can be done to shelter the crew other than to get them to Mars and the partial protection of its thin atmosphere and rocky mass as quickly as possible.

At the moment, given existing chemical propulsion technology, Mars transits take months.

“The situation would be greatly improved if we could only get there quite a bit faster,” Dr Zeitlin told BBC News.

“It is not just the dose rate that is the problem; it is the number of days that one accumulates that dose that drives the total towards or beyond the career limits. Improved propulsion would really be the ticket if someone could make that work.”

New types of propulsion, such as plasma and nuclear thermal rockets, are in development. These could bring the journey time down to a number of weeks.

Curiosity travelled to Mars inside a capsule similar in size to the one now being developed to take astronauts beyond the space station to destinations such as asteroids and even Mars.

Aeroshell separates from cruise stage
The rover travelled to Mars tucked inside a protective capsule. Its RAD instrument was turned on for most of the journey

For most of its 253-day, 560-million-km journey in 2011/2012, the robot had its Radiation Assessment Detector (RAD) instrument switched on inside the cruise vessel, which gave a degree of protection.

RAD counts the numbers of energetic particles – mostly protons – hitting its sensors.

The particles of concern fall into two categories – those that are accelerated away from our dynamic Sun; and those that arrive at high velocity from outside of the Solar System.

Radiation exposures comparison

  • Annual average (all sources, UK) – 2.7mSv
  • Whole-body CT scan – 10mSv
  • Nuclear power worker (annual, UK) – 20mSv
  • 6 months on the space station – 100mSv
  • 6 months in deep space – 320mSv

Source: UK HPA / Nasa

This latter category originates from exploded stars and the environs of black holes.

These galactic cosmic rays (GCRs) impart a lot of energy when they strike the human body and will damage DNA in cells. They are also the most difficult to shield against.

Earth’s thick atmosphere, its magnetic field and its huge rock bulk provide protection to people living on its surface, but for astronauts in deep space even an aluminium hull 30cm thick is not going to change their exposure to GCRs very much.

The RAD data revealed an average GCR dose equivalent rate of 1.84 milliSieverts (mSv) per day during the rover’s cruise to Mars. (The Sievert is a standard measure of the biological impacts of radiation.) This dose rate is about the same as having a full-body CT scan in a hospital every five days or so.

Number reassessment

Dr Zeitlin and his team used this measurement as a guide to work out what an astronaut could expect on a Mars mission, assuming he or she had a similarly shielded spacecraft, travelled at a time when the Sun’s activity was broadly the same and completed the journey in just 180 days – Nasa’s “design reference” transit time for a manned mission to Mars.

They calculated the total dose just for the cruise phases to and from Mars to be 660mSv. The team promises to come back with the additional number from surface exposure once Curiosity has taken more measurements at its landing location on the planet’s equator.

But even this 660mSv figure represents a large proportion of the 1,000mSv for career exposure that several space agencies work to keep their astronauts from approaching. Reaching 1,000mSv is associated with a 5% increase in the risk of developing a fatal cancer. There would likely be neurological impairment and eyesight damage as well. Nasa actually works to keep its astronauts below a 3% excess risk.

“If you extrapolate the daily measurements that were made by RAD to a 500-day mission you would incur exposures that would cause most individuals to exceed that 3% limit,” explained Dr Eddie Semones, the spaceflight radiation health officer at Nasa’s Johnson Space Center, who added that experts were reviewing the restriction.

“Currently, we’re looking at that 3% standard and its applicability for exploration-type missions, and those discussions are going forward on how to handle that and what steps need to be taken to protect the crew.”

All this should be set against the dangers associated with space travel in general, such as launching on a rocket or trying to land on another planet. It is a dangerous business.

It also needs to be considered in the context of the risks of contracting cancer during a “normal” lifetime on Earth, which is 26% (for a UK citizen).

Complex calculation

The space agencies have quite deliberately set conservative limits for their astronauts but it seems clear they would have to relax their rules somewhat or mitigate the risks in some other way to authorise a Mars mission.

Does the glory of visiting Mars outweigh the health risks?

However, the scenario for commercial ventures could be very different. Two initiatives – Inspiration Mars and Mars One– have been announced recently that propose getting people to Mars in the next 10 years using existing technologies.

Privateer astronauts that participate in these projects may regard the extra risks associated with radiation to be an acceptable gamble given the extraordinary prize of walking on the Red Planet.

Dr Kevin Fong is director of the Centre for Space Medicine at University College London, UK, and has written about the dangers associated with space exploration. He said that what Dr Zeitlin and colleagues had done was help remove some of the uncertainty in the risk assessment.

“Radiobiology is actually really tricky because how the body will respond to exposure will depend on many factors, such as whether you’re old or young, male or female,” he told BBC News.

“What’s important about this study is that it characterises the deep space radiation environment for the first time in a vehicle whose shielding is not orders of magnitude different from that which you would expect to put a human crew inside.”

Position of RAD instrument on Mars
The RAD instrument continues to gather data on the surface of Mars

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Giant Pink Slugs Found

Giant Pink Slugs Found Living On ‘Magical’ Mountain In Australia

The Huffington Post  |  By Posted: 05/31/2013 10:10 am EDT  |  Updated: 06/03/2013 11:36 am EDT

What’s bright pink, slimy and can grow to up to eight inches long? Why,Triboniophorus aff. graeffei, of course!

The brilliantly-pink variety of slug has only been spotted in one area — the subalpine reaches of Mount Kaputar, a 5,000-foot peak that was once a volcano in northern New South Wales, Australia.

“On a good morning, you can walk around and see hundreds of them,” National Parks and Wildlife Service ranger Michael Murphy told the Australian Broadcasting Company. “But only in that one area.”

Photos courtesy of New South Wales National Parks and Wildlife Service.

pink slugs

The fluorescent invertebrates spend their days hiding, according to Murphy, and then climb trees at night to forage for food. The slugs’ distinctive coloring may be meant as a form of camouflage, according to the National Parks and Wildlife Service.

While locals have reported seeing the creatures for years, researchers have only recently confirmed that the slugs are unique to Mount Kaputar, explains The Sydney Morning Herald.

The slugs are “relics” of a time when Australia was joined to much of the world as part of a vast supercontinent known as Gondwana, or Gondwanaland, Murphy told the ABC.

A volcanic eruption at Mount Kaputar about 17 million years ago created a rare haven for the ancient creatures, even as most of the habitat below them dried up, according to The Herald.

In fact, the region is so environmentally sensitive that the NSW Scientific Committee is thinking about designating the area as a protected ”endangered ecological community,” The Herald notes. The area is particularly susceptible to climate change and a few degrees of warming could spell disaster for the fragile mountain ecosystem.

”It’s just one of those magical places,” Murphy told The Herald.

pink slugs

pink slugs

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Cute Dogs for your Monday Blues

Here they are – cute dogs to cheer up your Monday.

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Grandmother Paints for First Time after Two Strokes

Grandmother Paints For The First Time In Her Life After Suffering Two Strokes

Posted: 05/02/2013 1:29 pm EDT  |  Updated: 05/02/2013 1:29 pm EDT

 
Grandma Paints After Stroke

A family was “astounded” to find their 90-year-old grandmother had produced a lovely painting, after showing no interest in art her entire life.

“She has never painted in her life,” grandson Casey Nelson wrote on Reddit, where the photo quickly became viral.

Nelson connects his grandmother’s new found artistry with two separate strokes she suffered on both sides of her brain more than a year ago.

“She now suffers from Wernicke’s Aphasia, a condition that inhibits her ability to make sense when she speaks, and her ability to understand other’s speech,” Nelson explained. “She is often confused and angry and sometimes doesn’t recognize me, but [she] has her bright days too. She has been living in nursing homes since the stroke, and that’s where she did the painting. It was part of an art activity a few weeks ago. As far as anyone knows, this is her first attempt at art of any kind.”

We’re just as impressed as Nelson is by his grandmother’s new work. Creativity sparked or furthered after experiencing brain damage is well-documented. Among the many who have become artists after having a strokeJon Sarkin‘s story stands out. Once a straight-laced chiropractor, Sarkin became a passionate and much-sought-after artist with a compulsive need to create mixed-media pieces.

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