Archive for the 'Science' Category

Scariest item of the week — and it’s only Monday

Monday, October 14th, 2002

From yesterday’s N.Y. Times Week in Review, a brief item noting that an asteroid entered the earth’s atmosphere in June somewhere over the Mediterranean and exploded with the force of a Hiroshima-strength nuclear bomb. U.S. instruments detected the explosion and properly identified it as the random natural event it was. A U.S. officer quoted in the story asks us to imagine that the asteroid had been poised over, say, India or Pakistan: “To our knowledge, neither of those nations have the sophisticated sensors that can determine the difference between a natural N.E.O. ["near earth object"] impact and a nuclear detonation.”

Oh dear, what can the anti-matter be?

Thursday, September 19th, 2002

Enough about Bob Greene already! What’s really important? Researchers at CERN — the Swiss physics lab that birthed the World Wide Web a dozen years ago — have “made 50,000 atoms of anti-hydrogen, the antimatter counterpart of normal hydrogen.” Read more here. (Link courtesy David Harris.) This “blob” is apparently enough anti-matter for scientists to test the entire basis of modern physics: “If antihydrogen does not behave as they expect, the model will need to be replaced, and our notions of the structure of the Universe overhauled.”

What do we root for? Do we keep our fingers crossed that the standard model holds? Or do we root for the world to be turned upside down?

NYTimes coverage is here.

Hop high

Tuesday, August 13th, 2002

It turns out that beer is probably just as effective, or more effective, than red wine in protecting you from heart attacks, raising the “good” cholesterol in your blood, and so on — according to today’s Wall Street Journal. Moderation matters, of course; one or two beers a day seems to be the happy medium, with emphasis on “happy.”

On, Voyagers

Tuesday, August 13th, 2002

It’s the stuff of a great old “Star Trek” episode: the Voyager planetary probes just keep on trucking, and as they near the outer edge of the Solar System, they’re becoming — unintendedly — the first human-made interstellar vehicles. The New York Times’ John Noble Wilford’s paean to the Voyagers is great reading.