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Current Topic: Science

The Question of Global Warming
Topic: Science 6:18 pm EDT, May 23, 2008

The main conclusion of the Nordhaus analysis is that the ambitious proposals, "Stern" and "Gore," are disastrously expensive, the "low-cost backstop" is enormously advantageous if it can be achieved, and the other policies including business-as-usual and Kyoto are only moderately worse than the optimal policy. The practical consequence for global-warming policy is that we should pursue the following objectives in order of priority. (1) Avoid the ambitious proposals. (2) Develop the science and technology for a low-cost backstop. (3) Negotiate an international treaty coming as close as possible to the optimal policy, in case the low-cost backstop fails. (4) Avoid an international treaty making the Kyoto Protocol policy permanent. These objectives are valid for economic reasons, independent of the scientific details of global warming.

The Question of Global Warming


Putting the Brakes on Light Speed - New Technique Stores and Retrieves Entire Image from a Single Photon | SpaceRef - Your Space Reference
Topic: Science 4:04 pm EST, Jan 23, 2007

Researchers at the University of Rochester have made an optics breakthrough that allows them to encode an entire image's worth of data into a photon, slow the image down for storage, and then retrieve the image intact.

Putting the Brakes on Light Speed - New Technique Stores and Retrieves Entire Image from a Single Photon | SpaceRef - Your Space Reference


'Alchemy' Was the Secret to Making Stradivarius Violins
Topic: Science 4:28 pm EST, Nov 30, 2006

Chemical tricks were the key to creating the unparalelled tones of famed 17th- and 18th-century Italian violins, a new study says.

'Alchemy' Was the Secret to Making Stradivarius Violins


RE: He built a WHAT?!?! His parents are mad!
Topic: Science 8:11 pm EST, Nov 21, 2006

Decius wrote:
More home built nuclear reactors.

And I got an email from a coworker just the other day asking if I was interested in working with him on a IEC device.

RE: He built a WHAT?!?! His parents are mad!


One for the Ages: A Prescription That May Extend Life - New York Times
Topic: Science 7:19 pm EST, Oct 31, 2006

What a visitor cannot see may be even more interesting. As a result of a simple lifestyle intervention, Rudy and primates like him seem poised to live very long, very vital lives.

This approach, called calorie restriction, involves eating about 30 percent fewer calories than normal while still getting adequate amounts of vitamins, minerals and other nutrients. Aside from direct genetic manipulation, calorie restriction is the only strategy known to extend life consistently in a variety of animal species.

How this drastic diet affects the body has been the subject of intense research. Recently, the effort has begun to bear fruit, producing a steady stream of studies indicating that the rate of aging is plastic, not fixed, and that it can be manipulated.

One for the Ages: A Prescription That May Extend Life - New York Times


Two miles underground, strange bacteria are found thriving | SpaceRef - Your Space Reference
Topic: Science 4:05 pm EDT, Oct 23, 2006

A Princeton-led research group has discovered an isolated community of bacteria nearly two miles underground that derives all of its energy from the decay of radioactive rocks rather than from sunlight. According to members of the team, the finding suggests life might exist in similarly extreme conditions even on other worlds.

Two miles underground, strange bacteria are found thriving | SpaceRef - Your Space Reference


Inspiring Evolutionary Thought, and a New Title, by Turning Genetics Into Prose - New York Times
Topic: Science 4:11 pm EDT, Jun  8, 2006

Thirty years ago, a young biologist set out to explain some new ideas in evolutionary biology to a wider audience. But he ended up restating Darwinian theory in such a broad and forceful way that his book has influenced specialists as well.

Inspiring Evolutionary Thought, and a New Title, by Turning Genetics Into Prose - New York Times


RE: Wired 14.06: Don't Try This at Home
Topic: Science 3:49 pm EDT, Jun  7, 2006

Porting the hacker ethic to the nonvirtual world, magazines like Make and blogs like Boing Boing are making it cool for geeks to get their hands dirty again...

But the hands-on revival is leaving home chemists behind.... “There are very few commercial supply houses willing to sell chemicals to amateurs anymore because of this fear that we’re all criminals and terrorists,” Carlson says. “Ordinary folks no longer have access to the things they need to make real discoveries in chemistry.”

To Bill Nye, the “Science Guy,” says unreasonable fears about chemicals and home experimentation reflect a distrust of scientific expertise taking hold in society at large.

RE: Wired 14.06: Don't Try This at Home


Two Parts Vodka, a Twist of Science - New York Times
Topic: Science 4:09 pm EDT, May 10, 2006

AT David Burke's Primehouse, a weeks-old steakhouse in Chicago, the house vodka martini is garnished with a lollipop — a lollipop made from "reduced olive brine, olive flavoring and salt crystallized in isomalt" that is stuffed with blue cheese, according to its creator, Eben Klemm. The restaurant's house manhattan is made with leather-infused bourbon, sweet vermouth and a bitters-spiked maraschino purée, dropped into the drink as a liquid that coalesces into a "gumdrop" when it hits the side of the glass.

Whoa.

Two Parts Vodka, a Twist of Science - New York Times


Study Points to a Solution for Dread: Distraction
Topic: Science 3:45 pm EDT, May  8, 2006

The first study ever to look at where sensations of dread arise in the brain finds that contrary to what is widely believed, dread does not involve fear and anxiety in the moment of an unpleasant event. Instead, it derives from the attention that people devote beforehand to what they think will be extremely unpleasant.

Study Points to a Solution for Dread: Distraction


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