Pondering other places

I’ve added my blog over at the Pharyngula Amnesty Day and was poking around, as it were (It’s OK, I am a doctor. Actually I’m a gynecologist, but this is my lunch hour), at some other entries. Looking for fellow physicists’ blogs. Found a few, and will possibly find more.

A link to the 55 best online Periodic Tables at James Cronen’s blog (whose banner image is one of my revolving desktop images)

Twisted One 151 reports on the Navy’s live fire test yesterday of the prototype rail gun

Skeptic’s Play

Holy crap, this is really scary!

Yes, I guess it’s scary that somebody reports on science with two articles in the business section. `Holy crap, this is really scary,’ inventor says of strange phenomenon. Thane Heins has a machine and an unexplained phenomenon, and people are starting to whisper, “perpetual motion,” and trying to be careful that the big, bad scientists don’t hear. We’re so unreasonable about things like this.

Now, I haven’t seen the device and I don’t know what’s going on. Apparently when you put some magnets near this motor, it spins faster. (Are you doing work moving the magnets? Is the system drawing more power? Did anyone bother to measure this?). The article also explains how one way of testing this would be to put a load on it (which, I must add, you should so after you use it to power itself). But there’s no mention of this simple test being conducted. Blech. This is what you get when you have a reporter asking the wrong questions.

“What I can say with full confidence is that our system violates the law of conservation of energy,” he says.

Well, I think you’re full of something, and to you it may seem like confidence. But conservation of energy stems from the time symmetry of the universe — the laws of physics are not changing. Nonconservation of energy requires the laws to change; this from Noether’s theorem.

The other bit is bad, too, especially because of the standard headline. Turning physics on its ear. Whoa, pardner. Nobody’s turned nuthin’ yet. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, and all that. The thing about overturning physics with perpetual motion is this: it’s never been right. Not once.

What I want to know is this: is your house still hooked up to the grid, drawing energy? Why is that?

Bad Power

How not to get Amped up.

I noticed a quick blurb leading up to the Super Bowl that 30 minutes of the pregame power had been provided, literally, by AMP Energy drink. People, on bikes (and presumably, on AMP) had generated the necessary power for 30 minutes of broadcast (and the power for their own infrastructure) and had uploaded it to the grid. As this pdf file notes, they uploaded 37.2 kWh of energy to the grid, as well as well as generating 207 kWh of energy for local consumption at their event. It’s a schtick, it’s hype. I get it.

But let’s do some quick math. I searched a few grocery sites and AMP seems to be no cheaper than about $2 a bottle for 110 Calories of carbs. When you burn it at ~25% efficiency, you’ll get about 110 kJ of energy from that (a calorie being 4.18 Joules, it’s a pretty convenient approximation to be 1 Calorie — 1000 calories — consumed will give you a kiloJoule of work). To give you a kWh of energy, that’s 3600 kJ, requiring ~32 bottles of the “energy drink.”

That’s $64 per kWh.

There’s a reason we started using animals for doing work, and machines when they became available, and laziness isn’t it. Oxen eating grass is free — no effort went into obtaining the energy (which is ultimately solar in its origin). Oil, natural gas, coal — all are solar energy stored in the ground, and generally yield more energy than it takes to obtain, refine and transport for use. The food we (and some animals) eat, however, has energy invested in it. Planting, cultivating, harvesting, packaging, distributing. And if it’s meat, which has to eat food that we’ve cultivated, forget it. You’re much better off burning the original food directly for the energy.

18-1

Oh, yeah, that’s right. Hype doesn’t suit up and play.

A shame they couldn’t give the MVP to the Giants D-line.

Doo Wop

Dip, dip, dip, dip, dipping ethics for that superbowl party. (Sorry for the late notice) Or just file it away for the next party you go to.

Buffalo Hot Wing Dip
2 @8 oz. packages of softened cream cheese (i.e. 16 oz.)
1 cup chunky blue cheese dressing
1 cup shredded cheddar cheese
1/2 cup Frank’s Hot Sauce

Cream all the above ingredients together.

Add 2 or 2 1/2 cups of coarsely chopped cooked chicken, mix everything together and spread in shallow baking dish. Bake at 350 degrees (F) for 30-40 minutes, or until it’s bubbling quite nicely. Serve with sturdy chips, as in Scoops or Ruffles.

I think the Pats will win, but I’m rooting for the Giants. I’m not a fan, per se, but I’ve always liked them. I’m a Dolphins fan, and the irony of 18-1 would be pretty sweet.