Passing Forward, Ever Forward, Until We Run Out of Bounds

“It’s A Simple Matter Of Physics!”

[I]t appears that people are puzzling on how a person who is running forward, then makes a pass backward, can result in a ball that is still moving “forward”.

The story is in reference to rugby but this is an issue in gridiron football as well. A runner laterals the ball, and there is a question of whether it was a forward pass. A debate ensues, and it’s really a matter of whose reference frame is to be used: the runner’s or the ground’s. I’d like to cite the NFL rules on this, but I can’t find them online — the NFL.com site has a “Digest of Rules” but I don’t want some pre-chewed interpretation. I’d like to see the actual wording to see if they define what a forward pass is.

I Think Thermodynamics Still Wins

Potatoes bad, nuts good for staying slim, Harvard study finds

The findings add to the growing body of evidence that getting heavier is not just a matter of “calories in, calories out,” and that the mantra: “Eat less and exercise more” is far too simplistic. Although calories remain crucial, some foods clearly cause people to put on more weight than others, perhaps because of their chemical makeup and how our bodies process them. This understanding may help explain the dizzying, often seemingly contradictory nutritional advice from one dietary study to the next.

Every time I read a study where they imply that energy isn’t conserved, it seems that they sneak in a caveat, like this:

Although the study did not evaluate why potatoes would be particularly fattening, other research shows that starches and refined carbohydrates such as potatoes cause blood sugar and insulin to surge, which makes people feel less satisfied and eat more as a result, Mozaffarian said.

Eating more = more calories consumed.

You See What Your Knowledge Tells You You’re Seeing

But it doesn’t move!

Another take on one of my favorite passages from James Burke’s intro to The Day the Universe Changed, which goes like this

Somebody apparently once went up the the great philosopher Wittgenstein and said “What a lot of morons people back in the Middle Ages must have been to have looked every morning at what’s going on behind me now, the dawn, and to have thought that what they were seeing was the sun going around the Earth, when as every schoolkid knows the Earth goes around the sun and it doesn’t take too many brains to understand that.”

To which Wittgenstein replied, “Yeah, but I wonder what it would have looked like if the Sun had been going around the Earth.”

Point being, of course, is that it would have looked exactly the same.

You see what your knowledge tells you you’re seeing.

Dick and Jane not Available

Fun with Surface Tension

There’s a new physicist in our office – a summer intern named Moriel. Over her first few days in the office, Moriel gave us each one of her unique business cards, unique because they include a built-in physics experiment. Impressive. Most impressive. So naturally, we had to try them out…

(SFN members may (did) recognize the subject as one of the forum’s moderators and regular contributors)

Photography and Physics Tutorial: Filtering and Polarized Light

I ran across this short video on polarizing filters, Polarizing Filters for Photo and Video, and as a very amateur photographer I like tips that help me improve, but as a physicist I was a little dismayed. The presentation is some admixture of being wrong and being incomplete in terms of why the technique works. So I thought I would smooth over the errors and fill in some of the physics gaps.

 

The circular polarizer filter cuts out light coming from only one direction

This is either horribly watered down or misleading or just wrong, depending on your mood. The “light from only one direction” isn’t a reference to the location of the source of the light, it’s a reference to the oscillation direction of the electric field; we can view any source as being a linear combination of some amount of vertically polarized light and horizontally polarized light (or any two perpendicular axes). Unpolarized (or randomly polarized) light will have equal contributions, and polarized light will have more of one than the other; if it’s completely polarized, then it’s all one component.

If you put a linear polarizer in place with 100% linearly polarized light, it will cut down on the light according to Malus’s Law; the intensity varies as \(cos^2theta \) using the angle between the polarizer and the light. But the narrator speaks of a circular polarizer. With circularly polarized light, the direction of the electric field changes as the light travels, so it looks like a helix (wikipedia has an animated gif). If you were looking down the path of the light, it would be a circle. (The general case is that you have the two polarization axes of arbitrary amplitude, and they are out of phase with each other. Then the E field looks like it is mapping out an ellipse, so we call this elliptical polarization).

The tutorial goes through a few examples of using the polarizer to cut down on the glare, along with a reminder that many LCD screens are sources of linearly polarized light. What’s happening in the former case is that reflected light tends to be polarized to some extent, and since that’s sunlight it tends to be bright, so you get glare. To get a good picture, you would like to preferentially reduce the brighter sources, which is why you want to put the polarizer in place as opposed to the neutral density filter, which just makes everything darker. The polarization that takes place on reflection gives you light polarized parallel to the surface, so light reflecting off of a pond or the hood of your car will be horizontally polarized to some extent (this also explains why polarizer sunglasses are useful while driving or at the beach). But light scattering off the atoms in the atmosphere is polarized as well, and that’s a little tougher to figure out, since there’s no “surface” to use as a reference. That’s where a handy tidbit from atomic physics comes in handy: in many ways atoms basically behave like little dipole antennas, and dipoles radiate perpendicular to their axis, but not along their axis. So light from the sun, which is a combination of horizontal and vertical polarization, hits some atom in the atmosphere that’s away from the line between you and the sun. The horizontal polarization looks like its electric field is pointing toward you, and that’s the direction the dipole would want to oscillate — and dipoles don’t radiate along their axis. That polarization is diminished or (at Brewster’s angle) completely gone, which means that the vertical polarization will dominate from the blue sky. Since this does depend on the angle, the filter will have a varying effect, and you can notice this especially with a wide-angle lens.

But all of the talk in the video is about circular polarizers, and as I’ve explained, the light is linearly polarized. A circular polarizer turns linear polarization into circular polarization. So why would it cut down on the amount of linearly polarized light? Here’s what the video isn’t telling you: a circular-polarizer filter for a camera is a linear polarizer and a filter to change the linearly polarized light into circularly polarized light. The linear polarizer does the job of filtering out the linearly polarized light, and then the second component (called a quarter-wave retarder) does its job and gives you the circularly polarized light. Why not just use a linear polarizer and be done with it? Because in any camera where you are seeing light that has come in through the lens (e.g. a typical SLR or video camera, rather than a camera with a separate viewer lens), the light passes through a polarization-dependent beamsplitter that sends half of the light to the viewer and the other half to the meter which tells you how much light there is (and is also important if you use autofocus). But the system expects the light to be unpolarized. If you send it linearly polarized light, there’s an excellent chance the meter will get the wrong amount of light, so the picture will be over- or underexposed (and/or blurry). Circular polarization is the next best thing as far as the meter is concerned, since all polarization directions will be present on the beamsplitter, you still get half the light sent to the meter.

Now that you have some of the physics behind it all, you can go out and use the tips in the video to take some better outdoor pictures.

Either Luke Skywalker's or Marty McFly's Australian Cousin

Australian built Hoverbike prepares for takeoff

Australian guy builds himself a hoverbike. A hoverbike!

Chris Malloy’s prototype hoverbike has so far not done anything but hover while tied to the ground, but that is in no way stopping its designer from making all kinds of wildly optimistic projections about its performance and availability.

I worry about stability. Primarily of the hoverbike, but also of the users if this thing goes into production. I don’t see a lot of resistance to rolling (rotation around the longitudinal axis), though there is mention of gyros in it. I’m guessing that the optimism of going to production soon, is going to meet up with harsh reality once he is able to do some actual flight tests.

The only video on their web page is a smoke test
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Six Thousand Degrees of Separation

Dot Physics: What are the Sources of the Energy Sources

The main sources all trace back to the sun (which has a surface temperature near 6000 ºC)

The interior of the Earth is warm mostly due to gravitational potential energy. Basically, the stuff that formed the Earth was gravitationally attracted and kind of “fell” together. When they collided, they got warmer. There are other contributing factors to the interior temperature of the Earth, but I think this is the biggest one.

Rhett glosses over something here (and admits it in the comment section); radioactive decay is an important process in heating the interior. Early determinations of the age of the earth include a calculation from Lord Kelvin, who assumed cooling of a molten mass and came up with an age of several tens of millions years. Much older than the creationists/Biblical literalists, but not young enough according to the newly minted theory of evolution. Kelvin was unaware of radioactive decay, which keeps the interior warm.

I have one other nit with an otherwise fine post

[W]hy does burning fossil fuels give you energy? How about I say that in the burning process, chemical bonds are broken in such a way that you get energy.

This is a pet peeve of mine. Energy is released in forming bonds. Burning fuels give you energy because you break the existing bonds and form stronger ones.