As you may or may not have seen from the banner ads on the site (depending on whether you read via RSS or not), ScienceBlogs is running a Reader Survey at the moment. Here’s your chance to tell the Corporate Masters that they really need to sign up some more physics blogs. Or, you know,… Continue reading What Do You Think?
Author: Chad Orzel
Rocket Science: Still Hard
Bad news from the worthwhile sections of this morning’s New York Times: another SpaceX rocket blew up. A privately funded rocket was lost on its way to space Saturday night, bringing a third failure in a row to an Internet multimillionaire’s effort to create a market for low-cost space-delivery. The accident occurred a little more… Continue reading Rocket Science: Still Hard
Brief Interviews With Hideous Men
Every week, the New York Times Magazine features some sort of profile article about a person or group of people who are supposed to represent some sort of trend. Every week, the people they choose to write up come off as vaguely horrible, usually in some sort of entitled-suburbanite fashion. I’m not sure if this… Continue reading Brief Interviews With Hideous Men
links for 2008-08-03 [delicious.com]
Museum Review – At the Insectarium, Getting Down With All That Skitters, Buzzes or Crawls – Review – NYTimes.com "In the new $25 million Audubon Insectarium, which opened here in June, you can watch Formosan termites eat through a wooden skyline of New Orleans…, stick your head into a transparent dome in a kitchen closet… Continue reading links for 2008-08-03 [delicious.com]
Breaking News: College Students Drink
I subscribe to a bunch of EurekAlert RSS feeds, including the “Education” feed, which could often be re-named “The Journal of Unsurprising Results.” Take, for example, today’s ground-breaking study, Male college students more likely than less-educated peers to commit property crimes, which comes complete with the subhead “Sociological research reveals paradox of higher education, crime”:… Continue reading Breaking News: College Students Drink
Correlation and Causation
Around 20% of women who go into labor do so after eating Chinese food. Another 17% or so go into labor after eating Indian food. True facts.
links for 2008-08-02 [delicious.com]
Temporally Controlled Modulation of Antihydrogen Production and the Temperature Scaling of Antiproton-Positron Recombination "Our observations have established a pulsed source of atomic antimatter, with a rise time of about 1 s, and a pulse length ranging from 3 to 100 s. " (tags: physics science particles experiment articles) Hidden Variable Models for Quantum Theory Cannot… Continue reading links for 2008-08-02 [delicious.com]
Bunnies Made of Cheese: The Second Draft
The second complete draft was sent off to my editor yesterday, and after a little bit of excitement regarding files that wouldn’t open, it was successfully delivered. There were only minor changes since the last update, mostly having to do with the figures and section headers and so on. I’ll put the table of contents… Continue reading Bunnies Made of Cheese: The Second Draft
Failing Schools: Better Than Nothing
You know, my opinion of “No Child Left Behind” style attempts to measure “failing” schools is as low as anybody’s, but even I think this new Ohio State study sounds ridiculous: Up to three-quarters of U.S. schools deemed failing based on achievement test scores would receive passing grades if evaluated using a less biased measure,… Continue reading Failing Schools: Better Than Nothing
ScienceBlogs: Now With More Facts
The Borg assimilates another quality blogger: Built On Facts is joining ScienceBlogs. If you haven’t been reading Matt’s blog, it’s one of the best basic physics blogs around, with math and everything. It’ll be good to have another non-philatelic scientist around. Update your blogrolls accordingly.