Dark Energy, Faster-Than-Light Travel, and Fine Structure Bombs

Figure from my relativity book showing how FTL violates causality.

Last week’s talks were using sci-fi space travel as a hook to talk about relativity, and my original idea for the talk was to explain how faster-than-light travel ultimately ends up violating causality. Some observers will see effects happening before the events that cause them, and that’s just weird. In How to Teach Relativity to… Continue reading Dark Energy, Faster-Than-Light Travel, and Fine Structure Bombs

Cosmos, Just-So Stories, and Hindsight

I have a couple of things in the mental queue for this week, but I’m still playing catch-up from my trip to Texas, so instead you get a really quick comment on last night’s Cosmos. This one was all about the history of the Earth– continents moving, climate changing, mass extinctions– stuff that I know… Continue reading Cosmos, Just-So Stories, and Hindsight

Space Travel, Einstein, and GPS

Slide from my talk at Space Center Houston.

Below you’ll find the slides from my Physics Day presentations at Space Center Houston, embedded via SlideShare. I was doing the TED-style minimal text thing, so they’re probably not all that comprehensible on their own. The event was supposed to have a pop-culture connection, so I decided to use space travel and extrasolar planets as… Continue reading Space Travel, Einstein, and GPS

Cover for Eureka! Discovering Your Inner Scientist

Cover for the book-in-progress.

My Thursday presentation here in Houston went well, though it was a pretty small crowd. I’ll be doing it again today before running to the airport to get home. I didn’t really have an opportunity to do shameless self-promotion regarding the new book, but I did get a copy of the official cover for it,… Continue reading Cover for Eureka! Discovering Your Inner Scientist

Trespassing on Einstein’s Lawn by Amanda Gefter

One of the pop-physics books I’ve read recently was Amanda Gefter’s much-discussed Trespassing on Einstein’s Lawn. I was going to post a review of it back in March, but literally the day I was planning to write it, I got email from an editor at Physics Today asking if I had any books I’d like… Continue reading Trespassing on Einstein’s Lawn by Amanda Gefter

Messing With Texas

Slide from my talk for this week in Houston.

I had hoped to have another post or two scheduled for the end of this week, but The Pip got some kind of stomach bug, and threw everything into disarray. And tonight, I’m flying to Houston to give a couple of talks as part of Physics Day at Space Center Houston. Life being what it… Continue reading Messing With Texas

SteelyKid Demonstrates Relativity

SteelyKid tosses a ball to demonstrate Galileian relativity.

Before going to the playground Saturday to investigate non-intertial frames, SteelyKid and I went over to campus to do some experiments in relativity. Galileian relativity, that is: What you see here is SteelyKid sitting on a rolling lab cart with a camera bolted to it. She throws a ball up in the air a couple… Continue reading SteelyKid Demonstrates Relativity

Non-Inertial Playground Physics

SteelyKid on the merry-go-round used for this experiment.

The Schenectady JCC, where SteelyKid and The Pip go to day care, has a playground with a merry-go-round on it. How this hasn’t been sued out of existence, I have no idea, but it’s a great boon to a physics professor. I’ve used it before to talk about angular momentum, but this weekend I enlisted… Continue reading Non-Inertial Playground Physics

Cosmos and the Women

Cartoon people form the cosmos reboot, from http://www.trueanomalies.com/taking-no-snark-to-the-next-level/

Back when the first episode of the Cosmos reboot aired, somebody put together a composite of the cartoon people who flashed on screen, and we played a guessing game on Twitter. The image above is from a blog post by Meg at True Anomalies, and I think it was probably her, but the ephemeral nature… Continue reading Cosmos and the Women

Great Moments in Puzzling Axis Labels

Figure from Kevin Drum's blog, modified from Schmitt and Boushey report.

While I’m complaining about statisticulation in social media, I was puzzled by the graph in Kevin Drum’s recent post about college wage gaps, which is reproduced as the “featured image” above, and also copied below for those reading via RSS. I don’t dispute the general phenomenon this is describing– that the top 10% of college… Continue reading Great Moments in Puzzling Axis Labels