{ASDKJHADSFKJDSHFquestionmark. Also, broccoli.}


Perhaps ambagious.
One day I will push a grammar nazi to the edge of their endurance; without warning, I'll mysteriously disappear with a startled gasp and a "URGHhrghgggghhh!". When that happens, please feel free to ignore the peculiar trickle of red meandering towards some cliff. You should, instead, go and untie the bottle of red ink from the leg of whichever pitiful seagull I've decided to prank.


.
Photograph

holymoleculesbatman:

The international radiation symbol (also known as trefoil) first appeared in 1946, at the University of California, Berkeley Radiation Laboratory. At the time, it was rendered as magenta, and was set on a blue background. The modern version used in the U.S. is magenta against a yellow background, and it is drawn with a central circle of radius R, an internal radius of 1.5R and an external radius of 5R for the blades, which are separated from each other by 60°. The trefoil is black in the international version, which is also acceptable in the U.S.

holymoleculesbatman:

The international radiation symbol (also known as trefoil) first appeared in 1946, at the University of California, Berkeley Radiation Laboratory. At the time, it was rendered as magenta, and was set on a blue background. The modern version used in the U.S. is magenta against a yellow background, and it is drawn with a central circle of radius R, an internal radius of 1.5R and an external radius of 5R for the blades, which are separated from each other by 60°. The trefoil is black in the international version, which is also acceptable in the U.S.



Reblogged from FYEAH, CHEMISTRY!.

June 04, 2012, 12:27pm

Photograph

thedailywhat:

Case For Sunscreen of the Day: This man is 69 years old.
He drove a truck for 28 years.
The premature aging from sun damage to the left side of his face is extensive enough to warrant a feature in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Trucker or not, don’t forget your sunscreen.
[gizmodo]

I’m always paranoid about getting a tan on half my face when I drive but it never passed my mind to consider the other effects of prolonged sun-light exposure.

thedailywhat:

Case For Sunscreen of the Day: This man is 69 years old.

He drove a truck for 28 years.

The premature aging from sun damage to the left side of his face is extensive enough to warrant a feature in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Trucker or not, don’t forget your sunscreen.

[gizmodo]

I’m always paranoid about getting a tan on half my face when I drive but it never passed my mind to consider the other effects of prolonged sun-light exposure.



Reblogged from The Daily What.

June 02, 2012, 1:16pm

If my fingers were the Force

Text

.. then Jedi I am not, since I can’t feel them/it.



June 02, 2012, 1:09pm

Link

the common sense guide to surviving the zombie apocalypse:

gyzym:

So, in the wake of reading this terrifying shit, Postcard and I started chatting, as you do, about the zombie apocalypse. Here are some things Postcard and I enjoy: zombie media, common sense, and YELLING ABOUT STUFF. Thus, for your reading pleasure, please enjoy our simple twenty-step guide to NOT DYING in the unlikely event that a zombie apocalypse ravages humanity:
  1. IN THE EVENT OF AN ACTUAL APOCALYPTIC SITUATION, ASSUME THAT THE FOLLOWING THINGS ARE GOING TO STOP WORKING: running water (this includes toilets); anything that relies on electricity (this includes gas pumps); anything that relies on natural gas lines (this includes gas stoves/central heat); basically, anything that relies on there being a factory of some variety at the other end of thing you want to make do stuff. THAT’S ALL GONNA BREAK. THIS INCLUDES THE INTERNET. Thus, the most important thing to do in the event of a zombie apocalypse is: 
  2. RESEARCH. For as long as you possess the internet, do everything you can to learn as much as possible. Research edible/medicinal plants (or seriously, go into a bookstore and loot your shit a guidebook, they’re not large, they sell little tiny ones, you can put it in your pocket, WHY DOES EVERYONE IN EVERY ZOMBIE MOVIE NOT DO THIS). Research, from available information, how the zombies work/which of their senses are functional—for example, if they operate largely by smell, you want to work on smelling not alive. If they operate largely by sight, DON’T LIGHT FIRES AT NIGHT. And speaking of fires…

Read More



Reblogged from not language but a map.

May 30, 2012, 5:01pm

Photograph

proofmathisbeautiful:

Waiting for a bus? Math may help
(Via CNN)
Georgia Tech student Alexandra Gaigelas takes a shuttle bus to get around the Atlanta campus. Many times, she waits too long for a bus.
“There’s nothing more frustrating than standing at a stop, waiting for 10 minutes, getting on the bus and seeing another bus directly behind you.”
And that second bus is largely empty. It’s called bus bunching, and it happens when buses are thrown off schedule because of traffic, weather or too many passengers at one stop.
And when those buses are off schedule, the drivers try to adjust. Student Sukirat Bakshi says he’s been victim of a bus “drive-by.”
“It happened to me where the driver just would not stop at a stop. They would just run off to catch up to the schedule.”
It turns out math can fix the problem. Georgia Tech professor John Bartholdi and University of Chicago professor Donald Eisenstein used complex algebra to develop a kind of anti-bus-bunching formula. They took what’s known as the Markov Chain through the wringer. It’s a math theory that shows predictable long-term behavior.
“The trick is to hold the bus for an adjustable amount of time at one stop,” Bartholdi said. “We simply control how long they wait at the end of the route, and then we tell them, ‘drive comfortable with the traffic to the other end. Don’t worry about where you are. Just flow with the traffic.’ “
Buses in the loop are all connected through GPS and a computer pad. It signals to the driver when it’s time to leave. Georgia Tech is testing the theory on its shuttle system.
“This tells me exactly when it’s time to go, and the communication between each other is done automatically, so it takes a lot of stress from us,” said Clarence July, who drives one of the gold and yellow Georgia Tech buses.
Drivers can ignore the schedule, and riders on campus can walk up to any stop and know that a bus will come within approximately six minutes. Bartholdi and Eisenstein say their math formula works for any shuttle system that runs in a loop in which buses are no more than about 12 to 15 minutes apart.
“Others have tried to control buses by asking drivers to try to adhere to a target schedule,” Bartholdi said. “What is new here is that the buses in effect coordinate themselves. No one needs to tell the drivers what to do; no one needs to worry about being off-schedule or how to recover a lost schedule.”
Georgia Tech plans to fully implement the no schedule bus system on campus this fall.
Here’s how Bartholdi explains the equations used to calculate the space between buses:

This equation is actually a bunch of equations: one for each bus. The first line describes how the headway (the space between buses) changes for the bus that is currently at the end of the route (the turnaround point). Alpha (in red) is a control parameter - a number, say, 0.5 - by which the bus manager chooses whether the bus should wait longer (and fix imbalances faster) or vice versa. The “v” is the average velocity of the buses.
The second line describes how the headways of the other buses change.
This collection of equations describes how the headways change from bus arrival t to the next bus arrival t+1. In other words, it predicts the future behavior of all the buses.
Don Eisenstein and I recognized that this set of equations has a very special algebraic structure: they describe a “Markov Chain,” which is a sequence of events for which the future can be predicted by knowing merely the current state (no history is needed). In our case, we only need to know the most recent headways to predict the next headways, and the headways after those, and so on.
The theory of Markov Chains allows us to conclude that, in the absence of disruptions, the headways will move inexorably and quickly toward a common value, which is given in the equation above. What this means in practice is that the buses will move away from each other, to space themselves more evenly. In other words, we will have created a force, a sort of “anti-gravity” that pushes the buses apart and so resists bunching.

proofmathisbeautiful:

Waiting for a bus? Math may help

(Via CNN)

Georgia Tech student Alexandra Gaigelas takes a shuttle bus to get around the Atlanta campus. Many times, she waits too long for a bus.

“There’s nothing more frustrating than standing at a stop, waiting for 10 minutes, getting on the bus and seeing another bus directly behind you.”

And that second bus is largely empty. It’s called bus bunching, and it happens when buses are thrown off schedule because of traffic, weather or too many passengers at one stop.

And when those buses are off schedule, the drivers try to adjust. Student Sukirat Bakshi says he’s been victim of a bus “drive-by.”

“It happened to me where the driver just would not stop at a stop. They would just run off to catch up to the schedule.”

It turns out math can fix the problem. Georgia Tech professor John Bartholdi and University of Chicago professor Donald Eisenstein used complex algebra to develop a kind of anti-bus-bunching formula. They took what’s known as the Markov Chain through the wringer. It’s a math theory that shows predictable long-term behavior.

“The trick is to hold the bus for an adjustable amount of time at one stop,” Bartholdi said. “We simply control how long they wait at the end of the route, and then we tell them, ‘drive comfortable with the traffic to the other end. Don’t worry about where you are. Just flow with the traffic.’ “

Buses in the loop are all connected through GPS and a computer pad. It signals to the driver when it’s time to leave. Georgia Tech is testing the theory on its shuttle system.

“This tells me exactly when it’s time to go, and the communication between each other is done automatically, so it takes a lot of stress from us,” said Clarence July, who drives one of the gold and yellow Georgia Tech buses.

Drivers can ignore the schedule, and riders on campus can walk up to any stop and know that a bus will come within approximately six minutes. Bartholdi and Eisenstein say their math formula works for any shuttle system that runs in a loop in which buses are no more than about 12 to 15 minutes apart.

“Others have tried to control buses by asking drivers to try to adhere to a target schedule,” Bartholdi said. “What is new here is that the buses in effect coordinate themselves. No one needs to tell the drivers what to do; no one needs to worry about being off-schedule or how to recover a lost schedule.”

Georgia Tech plans to fully implement the no schedule bus system on campus this fall.

Here’s how Bartholdi explains the equations used to calculate the space between buses:

This equation is actually a bunch of equations: one for each bus. The first line describes how the headway (the space between buses) changes for the bus that is currently at the end of the route (the turnaround point). Alpha (in red) is a control parameter - a number, say, 0.5 - by which the bus manager chooses whether the bus should wait longer (and fix imbalances faster) or vice versa. The “v” is the average velocity of the buses.

The second line describes how the headways of the other buses change.

This collection of equations describes how the headways change from bus arrival t to the next bus arrival t+1. In other words, it predicts the future behavior of all the buses.

Don Eisenstein and I recognized that this set of equations has a very special algebraic structure: they describe a “Markov Chain,” which is a sequence of events for which the future can be predicted by knowing merely the current state (no history is needed). In our case, we only need to know the most recent headways to predict the next headways, and the headways after those, and so on.

The theory of Markov Chains allows us to conclude that, in the absence of disruptions, the headways will move inexorably and quickly toward a common value, which is given in the equation above. What this means in practice is that the buses will move away from each other, to space themselves more evenly. In other words, we will have created a force, a sort of “anti-gravity” that pushes the buses apart and so resists bunching.



Reblogged from or: if I am mistaken, I am..

May 28, 2012, 8:21pm

Photograph

novicemaker:

Tool Spotlight: Glue
What? Glue is totally a tool!
The glue we use for violin making is traditional hide glue, and no we don’t use it because we’re sticks in the mud who don’t realize that there have been major advances in gluing technology since the 1600’s. We do it because it’s still the best glue out there for the job.
Hide-glue is exactly what it sounds like, glue made from the boiled and otherwise mysteriously prepared skins of animals, and it has some specific properties that make it ideal for violin making.
First, it’s weaker than modern glues. I know, that doesn’t sound good at all, but it really is. I promise. What that means is that when some clumsy kid drops your instrument on the concrete floor of his parents basement a hundred years in the future, the glue seam is going to break instead of the wood. It’s a lot easier to fix a popped glue seam than a broken piece of wood.
Second, it can be dissolved by water or alcohol. That means you can take the violin apart to do repairs when you need to. And I guarantee it will happen several times over the lifetime of the violin.
Third, you can varnish over it.
Fourth, it sticks to itself. You can re-glue a seam without having to remove all traces of the old glue.
All four of those properties are the result of some chemical funniness that goes on with hide glue that I won’t bother to explain because I only half-understand it myself and I don’t want to look like an idiot.
The glue comes in a dry powder form (I think you can get it in sheets too.). You mix it one part glue to two parts water and then let it soak for a few minutes with the jar resting in a bath of warm water. After that you stir it up and it’s ready to go. You keep the jar in the warm water in order to keep the glue thin. When you’re done with it you put it in the refrigerator to store it, where it turns into a thick, solid gel-stuff.

novicemaker:

Tool Spotlight: Glue

What? Glue is totally a tool!

The glue we use for violin making is traditional hide glue, and no we don’t use it because we’re sticks in the mud who don’t realize that there have been major advances in gluing technology since the 1600’s. We do it because it’s still the best glue out there for the job.

Hide-glue is exactly what it sounds like, glue made from the boiled and otherwise mysteriously prepared skins of animals, and it has some specific properties that make it ideal for violin making.

First, it’s weaker than modern glues. I know, that doesn’t sound good at all, but it really is. I promise. What that means is that when some clumsy kid drops your instrument on the concrete floor of his parents basement a hundred years in the future, the glue seam is going to break instead of the wood. It’s a lot easier to fix a popped glue seam than a broken piece of wood.

Second, it can be dissolved by water or alcohol. That means you can take the violin apart to do repairs when you need to. And I guarantee it will happen several times over the lifetime of the violin.

Third, you can varnish over it.

Fourth, it sticks to itself. You can re-glue a seam without having to remove all traces of the old glue.

All four of those properties are the result of some chemical funniness that goes on with hide glue that I won’t bother to explain because I only half-understand it myself and I don’t want to look like an idiot.

The glue comes in a dry powder form (I think you can get it in sheets too.). You mix it one part glue to two parts water and then let it soak for a few minutes with the jar resting in a bath of warm water. After that you stir it up and it’s ready to go. You keep the jar in the warm water in order to keep the glue thin. When you’re done with it you put it in the refrigerator to store it, where it turns into a thick, solid gel-stuff.



Reblogged from Novice Maker.

May 25, 2012, 10:03pm

Photograph

fuckyeahmolecularbiology:

Tethered Up
Each cell in our body is encompassed by a lipid-filled “sandwich sac”, or membrane. These bilayered fatty sacs take on a variety of different forms when our cells move or change shape. Finger-like projections from their surface (tethers) help transport nutrients and ‘talk’ to neighbouring cells. Tethers can take up any slack when new lipids are made or if the cell shrinks. Despite their importance, little is known about their molecular structure. So researchers are generating computer models of lab-made lipid bilayers to simulate tether formation. Applying forces from different angles, they can watch the membrane as it stretches and deforms into a tether (as the image shows).

fuckyeahmolecularbiology:

Tethered Up

Each cell in our body is encompassed by a lipid-filled “sandwich sac”, or membrane. These bilayered fatty sacs take on a variety of different forms when our cells move or change shape. Finger-like projections from their surface (tethers) help transport nutrients and ‘talk’ to neighbouring cells. Tethers can take up any slack when new lipids are made or if the cell shrinks. Despite their importance, little is known about their molecular structure. So researchers are generating computer models of lab-made lipid bilayers to simulate tether formation. Applying forces from different angles, they can watch the membrane as it stretches and deforms into a tether (as the image shows).



Reblogged from Scientific Illustration.

May 24, 2012, 9:12pm

Photograph

massivesalmon:

thenewenlightenmentage:

Like attracts like?
Everything you thought you knew about electrostatics is probably wrong.
Make two metal spheres positively electrically charged, bring them close together, and what happens? They’ll repel one another, because like charges repel – right?
Wrong. According to physicist John Lekner at the Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand, they will most probably attract one another, violating the intuitions of basic physics. The counterintuitive result was published today in the Proceedings of the Royal Society A1.
Continue Reading

Science! In New Zealand!

Read the full article!

massivesalmon:

thenewenlightenmentage:

Like attracts like?

Everything you thought you knew about electrostatics is probably wrong.

Make two metal spheres positively electrically charged, bring them close together, and what happens? They’ll repel one another, because like charges repel – right?

Wrong. According to physicist John Lekner at the Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand, they will most probably attract one another, violating the intuitions of basic physics. The counterintuitive result was published today in the Proceedings of the Royal Society A1.

Continue Reading

Science! In New Zealand!

Read the full article!



Reblogged from Swimming Up Stream.

May 24, 2012, 7:29pm