Welcome to our COR210 (Scientific Revolutions) class blog. Here we will explore contemporary themes in science and technology, reflect on the ways in which science, science fiction, and magic intersect, and consider both the possibilties and limitations of science in society. Enjoy!
Monday, November 29, 2010
Search For The Begining
There have been mixed opinions from the very beginning of this project. Some believe it is a catastrophic waste of money while others see it as a key to the future. The proof will be seen in the pudding, luckily for us only a few months away. The primary objective of building this Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer is to detect dark matter which is believed to exist through out space. If the device dose its job correctly, we will prove the existence of dark matter in some sort of measurable form. Others hope that it will turn up something entirely new. In the words o Samuel Chao Chung Ting, "Real discovery is outside the ring o existing knowledge."
The laws of physics stipulate that following the Big Bang, an equal amount of dark matter and common matter were released. Further more, these two types of matter, on contact will explode releasing a tremendous amount of energy. This is one of science's great mysteries
"The discovery of a single atomic nucleus heavier than anti-helium could mean there was an anti-star or maybe a whole anti-galaxy somewhere."
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/17/science/space/17dark.html?_r=1&ref=science
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJN2X3NrQAE
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Facebook: Updates and Upgrades
Facebook gives us a place and sense of belonging online, while keeping us socially informed. One can create multiple accounts on Facebook and be a completely different individual on each account. Users can meet all different kinds of people, keep in touch with friends and family, upload pictures, share links, and much more.
This site has progressed from strictly college students to children, the elderly, and every age in between. It is simple to find out what’s new and happening not only with our friends, but with complete strangers. We can say whatever we want whenever we want and be whoever we want, and only crave more of it.
People addicted to Facebook tend to check their page two to three times per hour, or anytime they have access to a computer, to get the new “update.” This is a waste valuable minutes that quickly turn several hours throughout the day. According to A Vision of Students Today, “Students spend roughly three and a half hours online everyday. A student who only writes forty pages in a semester may be writing about five hundred pages in e-mail.” Sometimes we don’t realize how much time is passing while chatting online until it is too late.
Just when we think our problem can’t get any worse, it does. This week Facebook is expected to release a upgraded set of communications services that will include a type of “E-mail messaging system.” It took about fifteen engineers and fifteen months, making it the biggest engineering project Facebook as ever taken on. Their goal is to go from a social network to one of the greatest communication systems ever created.
Mark Zuckerburg, chief executive of Facebook, states “This new messaging system allows people communicate with one another on the Web and on mobile phones regardless of whether they are using e-mail, text messages, or online chat services. These facebook messages will now have something that can be thought of as “social in a box” which means that it will narrow people down from friends to acquaintances in hopes of saving the user search time.” Right now it will not require getting a facebook.com address, but if you don’t you will not be able to receive outside messages. The service is only available by invitation, however soon it will open up for all users to try out.

Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s chief executive, on Monday in San Francisco. He announced details of a new messaging service.
There is no doubt the new addition will be popular. Right now 350 million users use the messaging services and exchange an unbelievable four billion messages each day. The concerns other webpages have is that once people try it, they will delete their e-mails and never turn back.
Jeremiah Owyang, an analyst with the Altimeter Group, says “All of the e-mail vendors should be worried – Google, Yahoo, MSN. The new communications services are an opportunity for Facebook to spend more time with consumers. The more they own of our digital day, the more money they will make.”
I think all of us can agree that Americans spend more time on Facebook than any other website, and this new system will take even more time from their days. Has Facebook taken it too far by stomping on other sites for their own egotistical reasons? I can only imagine what the powerhouse will come up with next.
A VISION OF STUDENTS TODAY
New York Times Article on the topic:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/16/technology/16facebook.html?_r=1&ref=technology
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Farther into Space; Farther into Debt

Over the past several decades we have come a long way in the study of outer space. Since the time of Copernicus, Bruno, and Galileo we have discovered not only things in our galaxy, but we can begin to study others as well. On Wednesday November 10th NASA announced that in 2014 they plan to launch their new telescope; The James Webb Space Telescope. This new telescope will use infrared light to find ancient galaxies that formed in the wake of the big bang.
Critics at CNET news propose that this new space telescope will cost upwards of about $6.5 billion and does not fit into NASA’s budget. CNET speculates that the close launch date of 2014 is too early, and would require NASA to come up with an additional $250 million in both 2011 and 2012.
On April 24th 1990 NASA launched a space telescope into outer space called Hubble. In the past twenty years since then, it has led astronomers to estimate, with high certainty, the age of the universe at about 13.7 billion years old. It has also given photographic evidence that what Ptolemy thought was a star called Omega Centauri, is actually a cluster of about 10 million stars. Click here to watch what Hubble has recorded of the Omega Centauri.
Though one might argue that the US doesn’t exactly have enough pocket change to cover this hefty $6.5 billion bill, I would argue that it is something worth exploring. If Hubble, costing only about 4 million dollars, is any indication of what the James Webb Space Telescope can do, I would say it is worth the expense! During the Renaissance our ancestors spent a lot of their time and money into studying unknowns of nature on earth, and began to skim the surface of outerspace. Now with the technology we have access to, we are able to do what they never could. Looking deeper into space, to find something that can answer our questions about how we got here, why, and if there is life sustained somewhere else in the universe.
“To know that we know what we know, and to know that we do not know what we do not know, that is true knowledge.” -Copernicus
for more information go to NASA's website.
Harwood, William. "Management Blamed for Space Telescope Cost Overrun | The Space Shot - CNET News." Technology News - CNET News. 10 Nov. 2010. Web. 10 Nov. 2010.
NASA - Hubble Data Used to Look 10,000 Years into the Future." NASA. 26 Oct. 2010. Web. 10 Nov. 2010.
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
New and Scary Ways to Get Your Buzz On

Thursday, November 4, 2010
Robots that "eat"

NASA Probe Approaches Comet Spewing Deadly Gas
On Thursday November 4th 2010 at roughly 10:00 a.m. ET the deep impact prove will come within 435 (700km) miles from the comet making it the fifth time that a comet has ever been observed from a close distance. The deep impact spacecraft has been chasing Hartley 2 for months and has been taking pictures along the way.

Roughly 18 hours before coming into closest proximity with the comet the probe will begin the “encounter phase” of the mission. The probe will position itself so that its three imagers (two imagers that can see in infrared wavelengths, and one that can see in visible light as a back up) can lock onto the comet for 24 hours plus. However in doing this it will point the probes high-gain antenna away from earth resulting in a delay before the pictures can be delivered back to earth, instead they will be stored in two on board computers. As soon as the comet has passed, which will not take long because the probe will be moving at 27,000 mph, scientists will reposition the probe so that it can send the pictures back to earth. While doing this the probe will continue to take pictures of the tail end of the comet.
However there are some risks to this mission. Scientists have chosen to stay 435 miles away from the comet for numerous reasons. The gassy pores of the comet could harm the probe if it comes too close, the brightness of the comet could harm the imagers and there is also a slight chance that the comets luminous jets may fool its navigation system.
Astronomers hope to gain a lot of information from this mission. They have struggled to understand comets for years due to their highly unpredictable icy bodies. This mission will help scientists understand what these comets are made of and where they come from. Due to its unusually high activity a close study of its spewing jets and gas clouds could also give us clues about the behavior and build of comets. Overall studying this comet could give scientists a better idea about how the universe came to be.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/39989774/ns/technology_and_science-space/
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Sticks and Stones
"But that's only the beginning of the evolutionary cycle... because as the next cycle proceeds, the input is now this new intelligence. As intelligence piles on intelligence, as ability piles on ability, the speed changes. Until what? Until you reach a crescendo in a way... could be imagined as an enormous instantaneous fulfillment of human and neo-human potential. It could be something totally different." (Like World War IV)
Robot Suit
From Japanese cartoons to summer blockbusters robot suits have been the stuff of dreams for years yet now these dreams are coming to life. Suit’s are currently being developed to accomplish two things strengthen the elderly and strengthen soldiers. Although, the idea of having the elderly running around stronger than Stonecold Steve Austin but the goal is to have those weakened by age to rejoin the workforce with the augmented strength provided by a robotic suit. The suit halves all the work done by a farmer in half. The other robotic suit being worked on is the Raytheon Exo2 which is lovingly compared to the Ironman suit. This suit at this point is meant for loading and unloading supplies from vehicles. The other application for the suit is to be used to support soldier’s legs as the fight on the field. This will allow them to carry more and be able to move things faster.
Human’s wont change in our life time or even or children’s children’s lifetime. Yet our technology changes greatly generation-to-generation and even during a generation. My own great-grandfather someone I knew went across the planes in a covered wagon. Think about the vast changes that can happen and now that we can actually augment our abilities brings great hope for mankind.
" 'Iron Man' Actor Clark Gregg Spends a Day With the Raytheon Sarcos XOS 2 Exoskeleton ." Youtube. Web. 4 Nov 2010.
Ridder, Knight. "Robot Suits to Aid Elderly Japanese Farmers with Toiling in the Fields." AARP International 21 Aug 2010: n. pag. Web. 4 Nov 2010.