What are you working on?
Iso-- that's the one that they are "pretty certain" won't cause the end of the world when they fire it up, right?The idea is to calculate how radioactive these metals will become if a beam mis-steering takes place during operation of an accelerator. In this case the experiment is related to the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN over in Europe which is set to fire up later this year.
B.
"Nothing is withheld from us which we have conceived to do.
Do things that have never been done."
--Russell Kirsch
Do things that have never been done."
--Russell Kirsch
Any time you have something like this you can share, I'm interested.Isotopia wrote:I'm at work for the weekend. We're doing a series of experiments where we look at activation levels of various metals when you park a very high energy beam from an accelerator on to a metal 'target.' Just above the rope you see a slug of copper which is secured to a target stand. Just on the other side of the target is a small rack which holds up to ten small samples of whatever metal (or material) you wanna expose to the beam to. The materials in this instance are various metals like copper, aluminum, stainless steel, etc.
The idea is to calculate how radioactive these metals will become if a beam mis-steering takes place during operation of an accelerator. In this case the experiment is related to the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN over in Europe which is set to fire up later this year.
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I have a passing interest in science.
Sometimes I even understand it.
"Everything is more wonderful when you do it with a car, don't you think?"
-girl by the fire, watching a tree moved by car bumper in the bonfire
It would be a shame if I had to resort to self-deception to preserve my faith in objective reality.
-girl by the fire, watching a tree moved by car bumper in the bonfire
It would be a shame if I had to resort to self-deception to preserve my faith in objective reality.
BAS, with almost every big expenditure in the basic sciences there's a small group of folks - many of them quite informed - who hold that there'll be consequences of some type as a result of a particular project. SLAC, where I work is no different. Certainly CERN where the above ATLAS detector now sits is has a few folks jittery with prophecies of doom and destruction once the beast starts up. I think the bigger problem for ATLAS is if it finds and only finds the Higgs boson which will pretty much complete the Standard Model. There's a lot riding on this very big, collaborative project in which billions have been invested and the idea that it will result in only one significant discovery has a good number of scientists spooked..In the article a scientist was quoted giving a percentage chance [an exceedingly small percentage] that one of the experiments would result in the end of the world.
- unjonharley
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Lots of areas indeed are seeing funding reduced, cut or savaged. Unfortunately it's a consequence of government and its perceived (and real) priorities. To their credit many current Republican members of Congress have listened to the pitches made my scientists about how scientific supremacy in the US is on the wane due to cuts in basic science. I think what's even more disheartening about the current administration is allowing amateurs and bureaucrats to run roughshod over sound scientific advice.I thought Bush eliminated most basic research funding.
A case in point: Julie MacDonald,the Bush Administration's point person at the Interior Department on endangered species. A report by the inspector general's office found that MacDonald not only has been "heavily involved" in editing scientific documents by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service related to endangered species but also leaked some of that confidential material to industry groups.
Same thing has happened within the EPA regarding reports on global climate change in which administrators heavily edited reports and/or made sure that such reports were downplayed at any of a number of scientific conferences.
Desert dogs drink deep.
Ah yes, that is the project they were talking about! Mostly we were having fun with the fact that someone had actually issued a percentage chance that the world would end when the thing is turned on-- I don't think anyone involved in the conversation seriously expects that to happen. Mostly we were wondering how he came up with the percentageIsotopia wrote:BAS, with almost every big expenditure in the basic sciences there's a small group of folks - many of them quite informed - who hold that there'll be consequences of some type as a result of a particular project. SLAC, where I work is no different. Certainly CERN where the above ATLAS detector now sits is has a few folks jittery with prophecies of doom and destruction once the beast starts up. I think the bigger problem for ATLAS is if it finds and only finds the Higgs boson which will pretty much complete the Standard Model. There's a lot riding on this very big, collaborative project in which billions have been invested and the idea that it will result in only one significant discovery has a good number of scientists spooked..In the article a scientist was quoted giving a percentage chance [an exceedingly small percentage] that one of the experiments would result in the end of the world.
Yeah, it will be a really expensive project if all that happens is the finding of the Higgs boson. Personally, I am hoping that they get really weird results (but not world ending results, unless the world is replaced by something I like much better!
B.
"Nothing is withheld from us which we have conceived to do.
Do things that have never been done."
--Russell Kirsch
Do things that have never been done."
--Russell Kirsch
Well, you never know.Ah yes, that is the project they were talking about! Mostly we were having fun with the fact that someone had actually issued a percentage chance that the world would end when the thing is turned on-- I don't think anyone involved in the conversation seriously expects that to happen...
I'm reminded of a piece I read in Richard Rhodes' book The Making of the Atomic Bomb. He writes that hours before the first detonation of the bomb all the young turk physicists and post-docs were taking bets on what the yield of the explosion would be. They were all pretty cock sure and were strutting around certain that the 'device' would work as planned. The strutting and chest thumping quickly subsided once word got out that Enrico Fermi was off in the corner taking side bets that the bomb would take out half of the planet's atmosphere.
Desert dogs drink deep.
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Am I going too far in this?
Just thought I'd mention...I created an in-character blog profile for Nothing-to-Prove on LiveJournal. Still hammering out the details but here's the link if you want to watch a thing of beautiful glory take shape.
http://nuttn-to-prove.livejournal.com/profile
Just thought I'd mention...I created an in-character blog profile for Nothing-to-Prove on LiveJournal. Still hammering out the details but here's the link if you want to watch a thing of beautiful glory take shape.
http://nuttn-to-prove.livejournal.com/profile
[url=http://tinyurl.com/245sagf][img]http://tinyurl.com/2bbr28j/.gif[/img][/url][url=http://tinyurl.com/23753ws][img]http://tinyurl.com/2auqebj/.gif[/img][/url][url=http://tinyurl.com/m4y82q][img]http://tinyurl.com/l56rdn/.gif[/img][/url]
- unjonharley
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YAY! *adds you merrily*diane o'thirst wrote:Am I going too far in this?
Just thought I'd mention...I created an in-character blog profile for Nothing-to-Prove on LiveJournal. Still hammering out the details but here's the link if you want to watch a thing of beautiful glory take shape.
http://nuttn-to-prove.livejournal.com/profile

Anything purple is mine. Anything else can be dyed or painted.
- diane o'thirst
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Isotopia wrote:Mozy, I like the idea of just the black and white for the orca. No red. And... maybe flip the image so that the dorsal fin is is aligned with the outer curve of the pool to give emphasis to the arching motion of how these particular mammals swim.
Just a thought.

I agree.... it turned into robo whale I think it needs more work.
- AntiM
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I Like You (Nootka The Killer Whale)
Lorne Elliott
(Chords are C F G and Am, though not in that particular order. Dead simple.)
Nootka the killer whale laughed and played
Down in the Ocean he splashed and sprayed
people would come to the shore to see how
He could jump and they'd say "wow!"
He'd swim near, they'd wade in and
Move real close reach out their hand
To pat him on the nose and when they did
He'd smile... and then he'd eat them.
Singing "Come to the sea and be my meal
I'm sick and tired of eating baby seal.
I'm a killer whale, stupid, It's what I do
Other whales like plankton but I Like You."
Little Billy Boo liked to play
Down by the ocean then one day
He saw splashing out at sea
A smiling Nootka, so then he
Waded in the water as Nootka came near
Smiling as if to say "No Fear"
Billy reached out his hand and then...
a great white shark killed Nootka
All the people on shore saw and yelled hooray
For the great while shark that killed Nootka that day
They ran into the sea to carry out Billy Boo
So the great white shark killed them all too.
The moral of the story is don't be a dummy
if you don't want tend up in some aquatic predator's tummy
Stay away from Nature where it's kill or be killed
if the sharks don't get you, the grizzly ears will
And when you walk around your neighbourhood always carry a gun
shoot first and ask questions when you're done
'Cause if you don't, it just might be
That you'll end up like Nootka
Or Billy
Or all the people on the beach who ran to save Billy
Or the Great White Shark who was hunted down and slaughtered in a vicious bloodbath
Now go to sleep
Lorne Elliott
(Chords are C F G and Am, though not in that particular order. Dead simple.)
Nootka the killer whale laughed and played
Down in the Ocean he splashed and sprayed
people would come to the shore to see how
He could jump and they'd say "wow!"
He'd swim near, they'd wade in and
Move real close reach out their hand
To pat him on the nose and when they did
He'd smile... and then he'd eat them.
Singing "Come to the sea and be my meal
I'm sick and tired of eating baby seal.
I'm a killer whale, stupid, It's what I do
Other whales like plankton but I Like You."
Little Billy Boo liked to play
Down by the ocean then one day
He saw splashing out at sea
A smiling Nootka, so then he
Waded in the water as Nootka came near
Smiling as if to say "No Fear"
Billy reached out his hand and then...
a great white shark killed Nootka
All the people on shore saw and yelled hooray
For the great while shark that killed Nootka that day
They ran into the sea to carry out Billy Boo
So the great white shark killed them all too.
The moral of the story is don't be a dummy
if you don't want tend up in some aquatic predator's tummy
Stay away from Nature where it's kill or be killed
if the sharks don't get you, the grizzly ears will
And when you walk around your neighbourhood always carry a gun
shoot first and ask questions when you're done
'Cause if you don't, it just might be
That you'll end up like Nootka
Or Billy
Or all the people on the beach who ran to save Billy
Or the Great White Shark who was hunted down and slaughtered in a vicious bloodbath
Now go to sleep
- joel the ornery
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- unjonharley
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