Saturn at Equinox

The Big Picture: Saturn at equinox

Checking in with NASA’s Cassini spacecraft, our current emissary to Saturn, some 1.5 billion kilometers (932 million miles) distant from Earth, we find it recently gathering images of the Saturnian system at equinox. During the equinox, the sunlight casts long shadows across Saturn’s rings, highlighting previously known phenomena and revealing a few never-before seen images. Cassini continues to orbit Saturn, part of its extended Equinox Mission, funded through through September 2010. A proposal for a further extension is under consideration, one that would keep Cassini in orbit until 2017, ending with a spectacular series of orbits inside the rings followed by a suicide plunge into Saturn on Sept. 15, 2017

The Rose-Colored Glasses of Success

Missed Kicks Make Brain See Smaller Goal Post

The researchers used a small, adjustable replica of a goal post to test players’ perception before and after attempting 10 kicks. While standing in front of the real-life goal, participants were asked to adjust the width and height of the model to scale.

The players’ pre-performance estimations didn’t correlate at all with their subsequent success rate. But after 10 field goal attempts, their perceived goal size was highly correlated with peformance.

Interestingly, the change in players’ perception didn’t just depend on how many goals they missed — it also mattered how they missed their goals. Folks who failed because they didn’t kick high enough perceived the crossbar to be taller, while those who kicked to the side viewed it as more narrow.

It's About Time, Part III

I was supposed to give a talk on timekeeping this past weekend, but it got shot down (Mendozaaaa! Congress!), and I also see that Chad has posted slides on a talk he recently gave on the topic, entitled A Brief History of Timekeeping. That gives me a nudge to try and finish my series.

Posting slides is great, but that tells you little about the actual talk — the slides for good talks are an outline, and diagrams/pictures that save you the thousands words of description; when the speaker just reads the slides it’s generally not a particularly good talk. (I’ve never attended a talk by Chad, but given his track record with his blog, I imagine they are good.) I’ll start this with a comment, and I don’t know what the narrative was for those slides — so Chad might have mentioned this, but perhaps not.

A clock is something that ticks. This is true, but it doesn’t tell the whole story; a clock is something more than that. You need a recording device, too. Time is the phase of an oscillation, and as that phase accumulates you need to keep track of it, which is why we have displays that get updated with each “tick,” or something equivalent to that. If you lose the phase information, or never had it, you don’t know what time it is. A pendulum clock without the hands, gearing, etc. is just a pendulum. Think of it this way: a clock that is powered up (new, or after an interruption) isn’t a particularly useful device. What’s the first thing you do at that point? You check a working device, because you want to synchronize your clock, i.e. you want to transfer the phase information, and set the phase of your device. And that’s an important distinction, because most devices that are called “clocks” are really frequency standards. They get turned on an off regularly, running only part of the time; the phase information is recorded by other devices that stay on continuously, as a sort of flywheel. The overall performance is going to depend on how often your frequency standard runs, and how good your flywheel is.

We’ve used numerous devices to build clocks over the course of history, including the earth’s rotation and orbit. The earth is not really a great clock, because the orbit is elliptical and the axis is inclined, which leads to variation in the length of the day and having the sun not be overhead (or on the line going overhead) at noon. But you can correct for these effects, and that’s an important point — a bad clock that is predictably bad is actually a better clock, because you can make the corrections to figure out what time it is. Some of us have experience with this — the people that set their clocks ahead to try and trick themselves into not being late. The problem is that they know that their clock is 10 minutes fast, and they do the math to figure out what time it really is. (This is similar conceptually to a paper clock, where you have a calculated time, but not an actual device displaying it.) NYC does this in reverse (as it were) with trains; they set the departure time a minute late. How will it work now that the cat is out of the bag?

When the earth was the “master clock,” the other devices (pendulum clocks, water clocks, candles, hourglasses, etc.) were the flywheels to carry us through to the next day (or next sunny day), at which time you could recalibrate your flywheel device. Eventually these other devices got better, and we realized that the earth had limitations, and with the maturation of atomic clocks, we made a transition from having the earth (a single artifact) represent the “truth” of time, to having a recipe for building a standard, based on Cs-133’s ground-state hyperfine transition at 9192631770 Hz. This is the way it has proceeded for other standards as well — once experimental realizations are better than a physical artifact, we’ve abandoned the artifact for a recipe on how anyone can realize the standard. We’ve gotten rid of the meter, which used to be a metal bar, and once the technology improves enough, we will abandon the physical kilogram.

What we gain in this is better precision and accuracy, but what we lose is that there is no “truth” anymore. To answer that old question asked by Chicago, nobody really knows what time it is (though lots of people do, in fact, care). We have these devices, which we use to measure time as precisely as possible, but none of them is “right.” We arrive at a solution for time by intelligently measuring and averaging clock signals, but it’s now a “voted” quantity, rather than there being a defined truth. However — and this goes for all science — the important thing is that “not knowing exactly” is not the same as “have no idea whatsoever.” Time (or a time interval) is perhaps the most precisely measured phenomenon, with fractional frequency stabilities for the latest frequency standards measured at parts in 10^18.

Another nit I had with Chad’s slides is that he didn’t show enough variety in his fountain clocks. Some images are hard to find, but not impossible (though the resolution isn’t great). Here’s one of the USNO Rubidium Fountain clocks (actual clock, not frequency standard)

rubidiumfountain

Pastapedia

Pasta: Edible Geometry and Italian Genius

In the world of cooking there are around 350 different types of pasta, and probably approximately four times as many names for them. They can be divided into few groups: long shape, flat pasta strands, short shaped and tubular pasta, small pasta for soup, stuffed shape, Asian type. Certain shapes of pasta and sizes are used for specific purposes, while others can be used in several different manners. New shapes are also being designed and named every day.

Colbert was Right

Bears!

Bear Run! 125-pound black bear wanders into Wis. grocery store, chills out in beer cooler

Officials from the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources tranquilized the animal and took it out of the store. Store workers say the bear seemed content in the cooler and did not consume any alcohol.

No alcohol? The bear did not have ID, and was going to be supplied drugs anyway, which makes the situation worse. Now they’ve got a bear with a drug problem.

I'm Shocked, Shocked to find Bogus Medical Devices Being Sold Here!

Trial raises doubts over alternative pain therapy for arthritis

“It appears that any perceived benefit obtained from wearing a magnetic or copper bracelet can be attributed to psychological placebo effects. People tend to buy them when they are in a lot of pain, then when the pain eases off over time they attribute this to the device. However, our findings suggest that such devices have no real advantage over placebo wrist straps that are not magnetic and do not contain copper.

Researchers conducted the first randomised placebo-controlled trial on the use of both copper bracelets and magnetic wrist straps for pain management in osteoarthritis – the most common form of the condition.

I’m surprised this is the first study, but not at the results. As I have noted before, the way that magnetic bracelets are advertised to work means that they can’t possibly function.

Ain't That a Kick in the Head

The New Yorker: Offensive Play

Scary, scary discussion of concussions and chronic brain trauma, cast in the context of the brutality of Michael Vick’s dogfighting conviction/suspension.

[L]ate last month the University of Michigan’s Institute for Social Research released the findings of an N.F.L.-funded phone survey of just over a thousand randomly selected retired N.F.L. players—all of whom had played in the league for at least three seasons. Self-reported studies are notoriously unreliable instruments, but, even so, the results were alarming. Of those players who were older than fifty, 6.1 per cent reported that they had received a diagnosis of “dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, or other memory-related disease.” That’s five times higher than the national average for that age group. For players between the ages of thirty and forty-nine, the reported rate was nineteen times the national average.

Also: Football’s wounded gladiators

I Spy, With My Electronic Eye …

NerdModo: Can Spy Satellites read your Car Number Plate?

Mathematically, the highest possible resolution for Hubble comes out to be around 16cm which is around 6.3 inches or half a foot. Now that is good enough to spot a car and a building in detail but not good enough to read a newspaper headline.

This is an analysis using Rayleigh’s criterion, but no other tricks or effects (i.e. single image). Hubble wasn’t designed for this kind of imagery, but is a reasonable order-of-magnitude example, because it’s in a fairly low orbit. You can squeeze out a factor of two, perhaps, in altitude and aperture size, for spy satellites. But planes are another story, since they are at a much lower altitude. Examples of some different resolutions in the link.

Mea Culpa

Chad admonished me for yesterday’s post on superconductors — and rightly so.

I scanned the article and assumed it was a blog about superconductors, and was quoting a press release. So the lack of a reference didn’t set off any alarms — citations aren’t always given. But I didn’t notice the bit near the end about patent protection, despite the yellow highlight, which indicates it’s not affiliated with academic research. When I Googled on the topic, hoping to find a better summary, I saw several links, quoting what I had assumed to be the same press release. But in reality, all of those sites were just linking back to the original source, and none of this has even passed the preliminary hurdle of peer-review. And it seems that this is a guy working in his garage, doing this as a hobby. That doesn’t make the results wrong, but since people familiar with high-temperature superconductivity haven’t reviewed the work to look for obvious errors, and nobody has corroborated the results, one can’t provisionally accept that it’s right, either. Not being demonstrably bad science doesn’t make it good science.

So I shouldn’t have linked to it. I screwed up (and I’m sure I’ll do so again, somehow. I’ve seen me do it.)