Inside Higher Ed reports on two new NSF studies showing a decline in American scientific publishing. Sort of. What the studies found, however, was that besides the well-known decrease in the relative share of journal articles originating from the United States, there was a slowdown in absolute numbers as well. This “plateau,” as the reports… Continue reading American Science In Decline?
Category: Science
Thoughts on Clarke’s Laws
Speaking of dubious and oft-cited “Laws”, I’ve run into a number of citations of “Clarke’s Laws” recently. Of course, these were apparently subliminal mentions, because I can’t seem to locate any of them again, but it put the subject in my mind, which is partly why I was primed to be annoyed by the subject… Continue reading Thoughts on Clarke’s Laws
The Canon by Natalie Angier
The Powers That Be at Seed were kind enough to send all the ScienceBlogs bloggers copies of the new book by Natalie Angier, The Canon, which is being pushed fairly hard by the publisher. I’ve been reading a lot more pop-science stuff recently, for self-interested reasons, and this was pretty attractive, so I carried it… Continue reading The Canon by Natalie Angier
Water, Water, Everywhere
There’s a new paper in Nature announcing the detection of water vapor in the atmosphere of a “hot Jupiter” orbiting a distant star. There’s also a story on Physics Web and a press release from the Spitzer Telescope group, if you’d like some stuff you can read without a subscription to Nature. The idea here… Continue reading Water, Water, Everywhere
Envy? Hardly.
Dave at the World’s Fair is trying to start a “meme” based on a Science Creative Quarterly piece about physics envy among biologists and vice versa. He’s asking other science bloggers whether there’s another field that they wish they were working in. While I have occasionally joked that if I had it to do over,… Continue reading Envy? Hardly.
Biological SF and “Getting” the Web
Andre at Biocurious points out an interesting piece in Nature. They interviewed four prominent SF authors–Paul McAuley, Ken Macleod, Joan Slonczewski, and Peter Watts about biology in science fiction. The resulting article is a good read, with lots of interesting anecdotes and examples, and if you go to the supplementary information page for the article,… Continue reading Biological SF and “Getting” the Web
Trust Me About the Sunscreen
Just in time to drive parents into a panic for the rest of the summer, the New York Times has a big article about sunscreen: Dr. [James] Spencer [a dermatologist in Florida] said that an S.P.F. 15 product screens about 94 percent of UVB rays while an S.P.F. 30 product screens 97 percent. Manufacturers determine… Continue reading Trust Me About the Sunscreen
Serious News from Outer Space
There have been a number of true and non-silly stories about astronomy and cosmology recently, which I’ll collect here as penance for the earlier silly post: Some theorists at Penn State have constructed a Loop Quantum Gravity model that they claim allows for an oscillating universe with no singularities. In one of those psychology-of-the-press moments,… Continue reading Serious News from Outer Space
Not Your Parents’ Summer Camp
The New York Times today has a story about a different sort of summer camp: Students with a passion for all things explosive and proof of United States citizenship pay a $450 fee that covers food, lodging and incidentals like dynamite. In the course of a week, the 22 students at this session set off… Continue reading Not Your Parents’ Summer Camp
You Gripe About What You Know
Via PZ, a blog on biology and science fiction is griping that biology gets no respect, and links to a Jack Cohen article complaining that authors and filmmakers don’t take biology seriously I was particularly struck by this bit: Authors, film producers and directors, special-effects teams go to physicists, especially astrophysicists, to check that their… Continue reading You Gripe About What You Know