clipped from naturalscience.com
Bierce, Ambrose
Boltzman, Ludwig
Churchill, Winston S. Einstein, Albert Frisch, Max
John Paul II, Pope (Karol Wojtyla)
Kaku, Michio of all the theories proposed in this century, the silliest is quantum theory the only thing that quantum theory has going for it is that it is unquestionably correct |
Saturday, October 27, 2007
Science Quotations
Abbott and Costello Math Problem
Water Crisis
clipped from news.yahoo.com
|
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Cassini Photo of Saturn
clipped from news.nationalgeographic.com October 15, 2007—While en route to study Saturn's two-tone moon Iapetus, the NASA/ESA space probe Cassini spun around last month to take this snapshot of the ringed planet. Orbiting Saturn, Cassini is in the middle of the greatest natural laboratory accessible to us in space," project scientist Dennis Matson with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory said in a press release. "With its rings, dozens of moons, and magnetic environment, Saturn is like a mini solar system." |
Sunday, October 21, 2007
The Future Is Drying Up
clipped from www.nytimes.com Scientists sometimes refer to the effect a hotter world will have on this country’s fresh water as the other water problem, because global warming more commonly evokes the specter of rising oceans submerging our great coastal cities. By comparison, the steady decrease in mountain snowpack — the loss of the deep accumulation of high-altitude winter snow that melts each spring to provide the American West with most of its water — seems to be a more modest worry. But not all researchers agree with this ranking of dangers In the Southwest this past summer, the outlook was equally sobering. A catastrophic reduction in the flow of the Colorado River — which mostly consists of snowmelt from the Rocky Mountains — has always served as a kind of thought experiment for water engineers, a risk situation from the outer edge of their practical imaginations. Some 30 million people depend on that water. |
Saturday, October 20, 2007
Brain Can Only Pay Attention for 40 Minutes
clipped from www.sciencedaily.com Psychologists are finding out that even when people try to focus on a task they tend to lose concentration within 40 minutes, and sometimes as little as 10 minutes. The studies are based on a new technique, called transcranial Doppler sonography, that uses ultrasound to monitor blood flow velocity in the brain. The technique could be turned into a warning system for workers who perform critical tasks -- such as pilots or air traffic controllers -- or even for drivers.
The phenomenon is such that the more you look, the less you see transcranial Doppler sonography (TDS). The device measures blood flow velocity in the brain researchers saw a decrease in blood-flow velocity over time, and, therefore, a decrease in attention Warm believes the study results can be helpful for the military, security workers, air traffic controllers and many others |
Friday, October 19, 2007
Possible Solutions to Atlanta Water Crisis
clipped from www.adn.com Former Gov. Roy Barnes, a Democrat who was defeated in 2002, told reporters this week that he had planned to offer grants to fix leaks that waste millions of gallons of water each year. He also said he planned to build three new state reservoirs in north and west Georgia to help insulate the state from a future water crisis
start using more "purple water" - waste water that is partially treated and can be used for irrigation, fire fighting and uses other than drinking all outdoor watering across was banned across the northern half of the state, restaurants were asked to serve water only at a customer's request take shorter showers |
Atlanta Running Out of Water
clipped from www.adn.com exposed lake bed at West Bank Park on Lake Lanier in Buford, Ga.
less than a 90-day supply of water Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue seems to be pinning his hopes on a two-pronged approach: urging water conservation and reducing water flowing out of federally controlled lakes Perdue's office on Friday asked a Florida federal judge to force the Army Corps of Engineers to curb the amount of water draining from Georgia reservoirs into Alabama and Florida More than a quarter of the Southeast is covered by an "exceptional" drought - the National Weather Service's worst drought category most of Tennessee, Alabama and the northern half of Georgia, as well as parts of North and South Carolina, Kentucky and Virginia Lake Lanier, a 38,000-acre north Georgia reservoir that supplies more than 3 million residents with water, is already less than three months from depletion |
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Hubble Photos of Nebula
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
clipped from hubblesite.org
|