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Today in Science

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The New Black

“Researchers in New York reported this month that they have created a paper-thin material that absorbs 99.955 percent of the light that hits it, making it by far the darkest substance ever made — about 30 times as dark as the government’s current standard for blackest black.”

First: the government has a standard for black? What other colors do they have standards for? Fuchsia? Periwinkle? I ordered an aquamarine T-shirt online last week. Supposedly aquamarine. When it arrived yesterday, it was totally teal. If the government has color standards, give me the phone number to the Better Business Bureau. I won’t actually call, but I will pick up my cellphone, picture having a long and frustrating conversation, and then tell myself I don’t have time for this B.S. now, I got to make dinner and do laundry first.

The new black would make a great museum exhibit. The only way to see what it truly looks like is in person.  Computer monitors and HDTVs can’t reproduce the color, or if they can, then a bunch of scientists just wasted a lot of time.

It would also make a great practical joke. You could mount a “Charcoal Black” paint card from Home Depot in a display case and advertise it as a new breakthrough in color. Who would be able to trust their vague sense of disappointment enough to declare it a fake?  “Are you sure that’s black black? It looks like ordinary black.” “Of course it is. What do you think they did, mounted a Charcoal Black paint card in a museum display case after reading about the idea on a blog, Pancake City, which you can find at 1001words.com? That’s the numbers 1-0-0-1. Ha ha ha, I say! Which is also what you’ll be doing if you visit Pancake City.”

That would be ridiculous.

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Our Malined Friend

I feel sorry for the toilet seat. It’s always the comparison point for grossness.

Every few months there’s a story on how Everyday Object X has more bacteria than a toilet seat. “Average keyboard has more bacteria than a toilet seat.” “Calling Dr. Gross–mobile phone has more bacteria than a toilet seat.” “Why don’t you have your baby lick a toilet? Pacifiers have more bacteria than gas station commode.”

If there are so many objects more disgusting than a toilet seat, maybe it’s time to back off the insults to our porcelain friend. It’s doing something right. It is beating our cell phones in the clean contest, and I don’t know about you, but I don’t poop on my cell phone.

What would I use as a substitute? A far question to ask. If I were a scientist releasing a meaningless study because my company’s PR department wants to generate publicity from a media machine that hungers for attention-grabbing stories that require almost no research or effort to report, I’d….well, actually, I’d kill myself, because my life would be a hollow shell, empty of a long-forgotten dream to do something meaningful.

Or…I would use an object that no one would suspect harbors bacteria, and give people two things to fret about. “Office keyboards have more bacteria than corn!” What? Corn has bacteria?

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Cancer Ruins Everything: News on RFIDs

There’s no way in the world, having read this information, that I would have one of those chips implanted in my skin, or in one of my family members,” said Dr. Robert Benezra, head of the Cancer Biology Genetics Program at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

Oh, how the cyborg future is fraught with peril.

The Associated Press unearthed several studies done in the mid 1990s that show a possible link between cancer in mice and RFIDs, Radio Frequency Identification Devices. I’ll risk cancer for a laser chip or a neural implant, but not for something that is essentially a high-tech name tag. The chips are popular with pet owners. If their robo-puppy runs away, many local animal shelters have scanners that can read these chips and retrieve the owner’s information, making it easier than ever for shelters to return the runaway pooch to a place that he obviously does not want to be.

The FDA approved a product made for human implantation in October 2004, although the product’s manufacturer probably called it a more congenial name than…HUMAN IMPLANTATION (“Who wants a permy-pill? We got three flavors.”).

An object that is cancerous to mice or rats doesn’t mean it will be cancerous to pets and humans. As I mentioned, the devices are popular with pet owners, and one would assume if RFIDs posed a significant health problem to animals, anecdotal evidence from pet owners and veterinarians would have bubbled up by now.

The AP’s story brings up some questions. Was the FDA aware of these studies before approving the product, VeriChip? Did VeriChip’s manufacturer know of these studies and withhold them from the FDA? Guess who’s stonewalling? That’s right, everyone! Read the article for a special guest appearance by a former top-level Bush administration appointee.

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The Nerd Herd

NASA Rover Finds Surprising Evidence for Mars’ Watery Past

Chemical analysis performed by the rover’s robotic arm-mounted science instruments measured a composition of about 90 percent pure silica — a material commonly found in quartz on Earth — for the bit of Martian dirt, said mission scientists, who first heard of the find during a teleconference.

“You could hear people gasp in astonishment,” said Steve Squyres, principal investigator for NASA’s twin Spirit and Opportunity rovers at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. “This is a remarkable discovery.” (space.com)

NASA PR: “Ladies and gentlemen of the press. Welcome. We gathered you here to make an exciting announcement. HQR-3527—I’m sorry, “Spirit”–has just finished its analysis of an interesting patch of soil it unearthed. The soil…is 90% pure silica!!!”

[silence]

NASA PR: “Hello? 90% silica? Is this thing on?”

AP: “What’s the big deal about that?”

NASA PR: “Well, silicon dioxide, SiO2, which we commonly refer to as silica, is—“

REUTERS: [scribbling notes] “One sec. How do you spell your name?”

NASA PR: “Wojozecski. W-O-”

REUTERS: “Screw it. I’ll just attribute it to Wikipedia.”

NASA PR: [sighs] “As I was saying, silica is found in nature in several forms, particularly quartz. Quartz crystals are typically formed in hydrothermal environments— hot, watery solutions, such as one from a volcano or a hot spring. That means at some point in time, there was water on Mars.”

AP: “Why does quartz need water to form?”

NASA PR: “Good question. The answer is complicated, so bear with me for a few minutes. Let’s start with a Chemistry 101 lesson. In a hydrothermal solution, there are no free molecules of—who’s snoring?”

WOLF BLITZER: “Zzzzzz….”

NASA PR: “IN A HYDROTHERMAL SOLUTION, there are no…”

REUTERS: “Excuse me. I have a question.”

NASA PR: “What now?”

REUTERS: “Science makes my brain hurt.”

NASA PR: “That’s it. Larry, bring out the nerds.”

Larry, using an electric cattle prod, jabs a herd of pencil-thin, disheveled nerds on stage.

AP: “Nerds!” [applauds] [whispers to Reuters] “They have all the answers.”

NASA PR: “From the top. Spirit has just finished its analysis of an interesting patch of soil it unearthed. The soil…is 90% pure silica.”

Nerds gasp in absolute astonishment.

NERD HERD: “That’s amazing!” “Wow, what a stunning find!” [nerd wets himself]

AP + REUTERS: “What a story! Thanks, Wikipedia!”

NASA PR: “Wiki….? Larry, get them out of here.”

Larry forcefully prods press out of room.

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Dude, Where’s My Crust?

Someone–most likely evil space aliens (as if there were any other type!)–stole a large part of the Earth’s crust.

That’s not the fancy-shmancy “scientific” view, but dude, come on. It’s obvious aliens took it to build more moon condos. Wake up and smell the coffee, which is made from dead bug larva. From the moooooon!

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I Am the World’s Most Healthiest Man

Study: Napping Regularly Fights Heart Disease

My favorite quote: “Taking a nap could turn out to be an important weapon in the fight against coronary mortality.”

Yes. And I will be your General.

The only better scientific news today would be a study titled, “The New Weapon Against Cancer: Potato Chips” with a full-page, color graph correlating the effectiveness of the potato chips’ cancer fighting ability with the amount of artificial bacon flavoring on the chip.

I love it when science supports my lazy lifestyle. We all welcome scientific evidence that effectively says, “Keep doing what you’ve been doing”, but think about how much more welcome that evidence is for lazy people. I and other members of the lazy community aren’t going to change our eating, sleeping, or exercise habits, no matter how much longer the changes would let us live. We’re lazy. That’s what we do. Well, don’t do.

Our only hope to reach a healthier lifestyle is to have scientists (”Glory be to them!”) is to redefine the slothful behavior that we’ve been practicing for most of our lives.

I don’t want to end this post with something along the lines of, “I’d write more, but I’d have to take a nap.” It is so predictable that it approaches cliche, and I’ve overused it already. The thing is, I really am going to take a nap, and that really is why I’m not going to write more. Truth is a bitch when it doesn’t sound plausible.

That will be the subject of one of my next posts.

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Doggy Senility

I read a blurb in Psychology Today that 90% of dogs have a moment of senility by the time they are seven. How does a creature that chases its own tail, eats poop, and says hi by sniffing each other’s butts have a moment of senility?

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Earth Global Warming Causes Hurricane-Like Storm on Saturn

I’m joking about the Earth global warming connection, but this is neat.

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Bear Behavior

If you think men go to extremes to get sex, you don’t know bears.

In Grizzly Man, Warner Herzog’s documentary of a man who lived with grizzly bears every summer for over a decade, Herzog says that some male grizzly bears will kill their cubs so the female will be ready to fornicate sooner.

Talk about a mood killer.

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Calling All Math Majors

I’ve been thinking about the flash video below that explains the ten dimensions. The way the dimensions are defined, there can be no more than ten dimensions, because the 10th dimension is the infinity of all the infinite universes. But I remember reading of some string theories that propose the existence of more than 10 dimensions, most notably 11 or 26. Are these other definitions just different ways of categorizing the same thing, like instead of “5, 6, 7″ it’s “5a, 5b, 5c, 6a, 6b, 7a…”

Do I even want to know? Sometimes I like asking questions more than the answers. Questions are easy. Answers are hard. When I think about researching my own questions, part of my brain goes, “Woah, hold on there, Einstein. We haven’t had our second nap yet Why don’t you go grab that duck feather pillow there, and we’ll think about this in an hour.”

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The 10th Dimension

If you watch one flash animation of the 10th dimension, make it this one. A lucid explanation matched with lucid design.

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Get Some Self-Respect, Europe

Europe’s first spacecraft to the moon ended its three-year mission Sunday by crashing into the lunar surface in a volcanic plane called the Lake of Excellence, to a round of applause in the mission control room in Germany.

It took you three years to fly to the moon, when your craft finally gets there it crashes, and you congratulate yourselves on your hard work? You even had the temerity to crash it in the Lake of Excellence, like its name would rub-off on the Crapship 2000. It didn’t. Now the Lake of Excellence is the Lake of Excellence with Pieces of a Dirty European Ship in the Middle of It.

Also, have you considered exploring a more interesting place in the cosmos, such as “anywhere but the moon” or “not the closest object next to us”"? The moon is ours. Or didn’t you notice the flag we planted there almost 40 years ago. What are you going to do next, invent snap-on pants and Velcro? Sure, we lost the original recording of the moon landing, but we saw it on TV, so it’s better than true.

Okay, ha ha. I’m done being facietious. The mission was designed for the craft to crash in the moon. Although now that I think about it, the fact that they designed the craft to crash is in some ways worse than if it happened accidentally. Objects hitting other objects is so Shoemaker-Levy.

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Scientists Offer Proof of ‘Ether’

Oops! Typo. Scientists Offer Proof of ‘Dark Matter Even for a lay person, I’m unqualified to judge the probability that dark matter exists. It seems though that there are some similarities between the theory of dark matter and the theory of luminiferous ether, which was created in the late 19th century to patch up holes in the understanding at the time of how light works.

We know that there is a flaw with the current theory of the universe based on what we can observe. So either there is a flaw in the current theory, or there is a significant amount of matter out there that we cannot observe.

Well, both options could be true. And that would really suck. If I were a scientist and found out that not only is our theory of the universe fundamentally flawed, but there’s a big chunk of the universe we can’t even hope to see as well, I’d call it quits. “The Universe is made up of cotton candy. I’ll be in Bermuda.”

At the very least, the International Council of Science, or whatever the governing body that doesn’t appear as the first link on Yahoo is, should change the name from “dark matter” to “we don’t have a fucking clue.” In the name of scientific accuracy, of course.

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Gotta Love the Comparison

Scientists recently discovered a bizarre, new crustacean 900 miles south of Easter Island. From the AP article (italics mine):

“Scientists said the animal, which they named Kiwa hirsuta, was so distinct from other species that they created a new family and genus for it. The animal is white and just shy of 6 inches long, about the size of a salad plate.

Great. We discover a hitherto unknown sea creature fantastical enough to merit its own classification, and our first thought is, “Will it fit on my dinner plate?”

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