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Very Hot Topic (More than 100 Replies) Science Schmience Thread (Read 419512 times)
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Re: Science Schmience Thread
Reply #435 - Jun 27th, 2009 at 3:24am
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But you can just judge a bill based on the title...like the USA PATRIOT ACT...I'm a Patriot...so it must be good!
  

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Re: Science Schmience Thread
Reply #436 - Jun 27th, 2009 at 7:43am
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MediaMaster wrote on Jun 26th, 2009 at 10:24pm:
....Someone tell me how lawmakers can vote on something when they havent even read the entire bill.


Don't be so harsh on them.  Nobody told them they'd have to read when they ran for office!  What is this, Hooked on Phonics?


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Re: Science Schmience Thread
Reply #437 - Jul 20th, 2009 at 12:59pm
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The 10-year-old who helped Apollo 11, 40 years later
By Rachel Rodriguez


(CNN) -- On July 23, 1969, as Apollo 11 hurtled back towards Earth, there was a problem -- a problem only a kid could solve.

It sounds like something out of a movie, but that's what it came down to as Apollo 11 sped back towards Earth after landing on the moon in 1969.

It was around 10:00 at night on July 23, and 10-year-old Greg Force was at home with his mom and three brothers. His father, Charles Force, was at work. Charles Force was the director of the NASA tracking station in Guam, where the family was living.

The Guam tracking station was to play a critical role in the return of Apollo 11 to Earth. A powerful antenna there connected NASA communications with Apollo 11, and the antenna was the only way for NASA to make its last communications with the astronauts before splashdown. But at the last minute on that night, a bearing in the antenna failed, rendering it nearly useless.

To properly replace the bearing would have required dismantling the entire antenna, and there was simply no time. So Charles Force thought of a creative solution: If he could get more grease around the failed bearing, it would probably be fine. The only problem was, nobody at the station had an arm small enough to actually reach in through the two-and-a-half inch opening and pack grease around the bearing.

And that's when Greg was called in to save the day. Charles Force sent someone out to his home to pick up Greg. Once at the tracking station, Greg reached into the tiny hole and packed grease around the failed bearing. It worked, and the station was able to successfully complete its communications role in the mission. Apollo 11 splashed down safely the next day.

At the time, Greg didn't think what he was doing was a big deal, and 40 years later, he's still modest about his role in the mission.

"That's all I did, was put my hand in and put grease on it," he says. If he hadn't been there, NASA would not have been able to make its last communications with the mission before splashdown, but Greg says "it wasn't life or death, [from] my understanding."

"My dad explained to me why it was important," he says, "but it kind of caught me by surprise afterwards, all the attention." iReport.com: Read Greg's firsthand account

That attention came from the media and even the astronauts themselves. Greg's small but important part in Apollo 11 was a story told by news outlets around the world. He even got a nice thank-you note from Neil Armstrong, whom he met when Armstrong went on a tour of NASA stations with the other astronauts to thank the staff after the mission. "To Greg," reads the note, which Armstrong wrote on a newspaper clipping of Greg's story, "with thanks for your help on Apollo 11. Neil Armstrong."

Perhaps not surprisingly, like many other kids who grew up during the Apollo era, Greg dreamed of becoming an astronaut. He says he remembers visiting his dad's office to listen to astronauts communicating with NASA officials on the ground.

"We could sit and listen to the actual communication with the astronauts as it was happening, and it was hard to understand, but I loved to do that," he says. "On Guam we didn't have good television coverage, so I think I listened to the [moon] landing on the radio. To me it was a huge thing."

Greg pursued his dreams of space exploration all the way through college, where he majored in physics. Unfortunately, he was unable to pass the vision test for the space program because of his colorblindness, but even that couldn't squelch his interest. Greg went on to get his pilot's license, and even though his career now as a gymnastics school owner isn't exactly space-related, he says that "ever since then, I've followed the space program."

And as a lover of space exploration, Greg hopes to see more missions to the moon.

"I think it would be an important step as far as going further, like to Mars," he says. "I would love to see us go back to the moon."

But for now, on the 40th anniversary of the moon landing, he can remember the small but crucial role he played in bringing Apollo 11 home safely.

"It kind of caught me by surprise," he says, "but I'm real proud to have been even a little tiny part of it."


Somehow, I've managed to completely miss this story over the years.  This kid missed his calling, though.  He definitely should've been a hacker!


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GForce.jpg (Attachment deleted)

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Re: Science Schmience Thread
Reply #438 - Jul 26th, 2009 at 9:52am
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Re: Science Schmience Thread
Reply #439 - Jul 26th, 2009 at 12:24pm
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Get ready for zombies!
  

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Re: Science Schmience Thread
Reply #440 - Jul 26th, 2009 at 6:41pm
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Yes, just what China needs...more mice!
  

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Re: Science Schmience Thread
Reply #441 - Jul 27th, 2009 at 6:12am
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X wrote on Jul 26th, 2009 at 6:41pm:
Yes, just what China needs...more mice!


They have to replace all of the ones that get shipped over here somehow.


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Re: Science Schmience Thread
Reply #442 - Aug 31st, 2009 at 8:44am
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http://www.ptinews.com/news/256707_Mobile-towers-threatening-honey-bees-in-Keral...

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Mobile towers are posing a threat to honey bees in Kerala withe electromagnetic radiation from mobile towers and cell phones having the potential to kill worker bees that go out to collect nectar from flowers, says a study.

A plunge in beehive population has been reported from different parts of Kerala and if measures are not taken to check mushrooming of mobile powers, bees could be wiped out from Kerala within a decade, environmentalist and Reader in Zoology, Dr Sainudeen Pattazhy says in his study.

In one of his experiments he found that when a mobile phone was kept near a beehive it resulted in collapse of the colony in five to 10 days, with the worker bees failing to return home, leaving the hives with just queens, eggs and hive-bound immature bees.


if true, it would help explain the 30-70% drop in bee population in the US and britain. they better figure something out because bees are sort of essential to our way of life. pretty much any fruit and a few other plants are fertilized by bees.
  

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Re: Science Schmience Thread
Reply #443 - Aug 31st, 2009 at 11:51am
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I'm sorry but we've had cell phones for about 20 years now and I think if there's something that puts out radiation it would be the old field like phones.  I'm just wondering what kind of radiation they're thinking it is.  Also, is it really a good experiment to just put a cell phone by a hive?  Seems like a bad experiment to me.

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Re: Science Schmience Thread
Reply #444 - Sep 1st, 2009 at 4:37pm
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I don't know pat, if you used controls you could get a decent hypothesis from it.

Say for instance put an active cell phone near one hive, nothing next to another hive, and the shell of an empty cell phone (no battery or anything) next to another and watch and see.

If the Hive near the cell phone dies off rather quickly than you at least have something to base the argument on.
  
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Re: Science Schmience Thread
Reply #445 - Sep 1st, 2009 at 5:39pm
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I was under the impression that Colony Collapse Disorder had been conclusively linked to forced migration (and, subsequently, exhaustion), not cell phones?


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Re: Science Schmience Thread
Reply #446 - Sep 1st, 2009 at 5:50pm
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No idea, does anyone actually give a flying fuck? =p
  
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Re: Science Schmience Thread
Reply #447 - Sep 1st, 2009 at 9:01pm
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The bees do.


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Re: Science Schmience Thread
Reply #448 - Oct 22nd, 2009 at 10:06am
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Primate fossil called only a distant relative
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Delicious Digg Facebook Fark Newsvine Reddit StumbleUpon Technorati Twitter Yahoo! Bookmarks Print  AP – FILE -- A May 19, 2009 file photo shows Dr. Jorn Hurum speaking to reporters as a photo of 'Ida', the …
Slideshow:Dinosaurs and Fossils By MALCOLM RITTER, AP Science Writer Malcolm Ritter, Ap Science Writer – Wed Oct 21, 5:09 pm ET
NEW YORK – Remember Ida, the fossil discovery announced last May with its own book and TV documentary? A publicity blitz called it "the link" that would reveal the earliest evolutionary roots of monkeys, apes and humans. Experts protested that Ida wasn't even a close relative. And now a new analysis supports their reaction.

In fact, Ida is as far removed from the monkey-ape-human ancestry as a primate could be, says Erik Seiffert of Stony Brook University in New York.

He and his colleagues compared 360 specific anatomical features of 117 living and extinct primate species to draw up a family tree. They report the results in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature.

Ida is a skeleton of a 47 million-year-old cat-sized creature found in Germany. It starred in a book, "The Link: Uncovering Our Earliest Ancestor."

Ida represents a previously unknown primate species called Darwinius. The scientists who formally announced the finding said they weren't claiming Darwinius was a direct ancestor of monkeys, apes and humans. But they did argue that it belongs in the same major evolutionary grouping, and that it showed what an actual ancestor of that era might have looked like.

The new analysis says Darwinius does not belong in the same primate category as monkeys, apes and humans. Instead, the analysis concluded, it falls into the other major grouping, which includes lemurs.

Experts agreed.

"This is a rigorous analysis based on many features," said Eric Sargis, an anthropology professor at Yale. He said he'd found the argument of the Darwinius researchers unconvincing, so the new result came as no surprise.

In fact, it confirms what most scientists think, said David Begun, a paleoanthropologist at the University of Toronto.

Jorn Hurum of the Natural History Museum in Oslo, Norway, an author of the Ida paper, said he welcomed the new analysis.

Darwinius is an example of a group of primates called adapoids, and "we are happy to start the scientific discussion" about what Ida means for where adapoids fit on the primate family tree, he wrote in an e-mail.

___

On the Net:

Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature



They are so quick to try and find any piece of evolutionary proof that even their own peers don't agree with them.  This is why science, as of right now, is on the decline.  No one wants to take time to actually do the work.  They want a movie/book deal and try to come up with something to get their name out their and have it be very unique.  Just wait 3 months and whatever news is in science right now will change.

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Re: Science Schmience Thread
Reply #449 - Oct 22nd, 2009 at 1:17pm
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It will be interesting to see how quickly this gets swept under the proverbial rug and forgotten about.


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