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Category: *

The fraction 1 over 473684210526315789 is pretty outstanding!

1/473684210526315789 = 0.000000000000000002111111111111111113222222
2222222222243333333333333333354444444444444444465555555555555555576
6666666666666666877777777777777777988888888888888889100000000000000
0002111111111111111113222222222222222224333333333333333335444444444
4444444465555555555555555576666666666666666687777777777777777798888
8888888888889100000000000000000211111111111111111322222222222222222
4333333333333333335444444444444444446555555555555555557666666666666
6666687777777777777777798888888888888888910000000000000000021111111
1111111111322222222222222222433333333333333333544444444444444444655
5555555555555557666666666666666668777777777777777779888888888888888
8910000000000000000021111111111111111132222222222222222243333333333
3333333544444444444444444655555555555555555766666666666666666877777
7777777777779888888888888888891000000000000000002111111111111111113
2222222222222222243333333333333333354444444444444444465555555555555
5555766666666666666666877777777777777777988888888888888889100000000
0000000002111111111111111113222222222222222224333333333333333335444
4444444444444465555555555555555576666666666666666687777777777777777
7988888888888888889100000000000000000211111111111111111322222222222
2222224333333333333333335444444444444444446555555555555555557666666
6666666666687777777777777777798888888888888888910000000000000000021
1111111111111111322222222222222222433333333333333333544444444444444
4446555555555555555557666666666666666668777777777777777779888888888
8888888910000000000000000021111111111111111132222222222222222243333
3333333333333544444444444444444655555555555555555766666666666666666
8777777777777777779888888888888888891000000000000000002111111111111
111113222222222222222224…

Via Futility Closet.

Amazing image of a huge movable mass of fish.


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Since submarines began roaming the depths in World War I, sailors and oceanographers, who use sonar technology to map seafloor topography and identify ocean life, have regularly run into “acoustic ghosts”—inexplicable bodies of movable mass that sometimes rivaled the size of a city—writes ocean engineering professor Nicholas Makris in IEEE Spectrum(Aug. 2011). Affectionately called UFOs (unidentified floating objects), these sonar readings were blamed on factors as various as deep-ocean mountains and changes in water temperature. Every time a theory emerged to explain the phenomenon, however, it was quickly shot down.

In 2003 Makris and fellow scientists aboard a research vessel just south of Long Island, New York, discovered that the UFOs were composed of hundreds of millions of fish—massive gatherings on a scale never before documented.

Image by Wayne Levin. Article at UTNE.

This kind of art would be awesome for the Phylo Project!

Specifically, this stuff by Chris Sasaki. Chris if you’re reading, check out the Phylo project – a Pixar-ish deck would be very very cool.

The effects of music on plant growth and health: The Bob Dylan versus Neil Young experiment.

That would be exposure to Neil Young on the right. Curious to see what would happen if a plant was exposed to Justin Bieber… (This image might be fun for a botany or music/neuroscience related slide).

Art piece by Tony Romano, 2007.

Here’s looking at Euclid. #mathpun


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From plus.google.com via

Justin Bieber physics question. #funny

(This is circulating on tumblr, but not sure of the original source).

In case you’re looking for genetics inspired fabric (say for that in vitro baby quilt…)

This one is called “gene map” and is very cool. Anyway, for sale (with other cool genetics designs) at spoonflower.

Via Fresh Photons.

Cell phone mitosis.

Epidemiology of traumatic head injury in Asterix and Obelix comics.

Title:
Traumatic brain injuries in illustrated literature: experience from a series of over 700 head injuries in the Asterix comic books (pdf of first page)

Reference:
Marcel A. Kamp, Philipp Slotty, Sevgi Sarikaya-Seiwert, Hans-Jakob Steiger and Daniel Hänggi. ACTA NEUROCHIRURGICA. Volume 153, Number 6, 1351-1355, DOI: 10.1007/s00701-011-0993-6

Abstract:
Background
The goal of the present study was to analyze the epidemiology and specific risk factors of traumatic brain injury (TBI) in the Asterix illustrated comic books. Among the illustrated literature, TBI is a predominating injury pattern.

Methods
A retrospective analysis of TBI in all 34 Asterix comic books was performed by examining the initial neurological status and signs of TBI. Clinical data were correlated to information regarding the trauma mechanism, the sociocultural background of victims and offenders, and the circumstances of the traumata, to identify specific risk factors.

Results
Seven hundred and four TBIs were identified. The majority of persons involved were adult and male. The major cause of trauma was assault (98.8%). Traumata were classified to be severe in over 50% (GCS 3–8). Different neurological deficits and signs of basal skull fractures were identified. Although over half of head-injury victims had a severe initial impairment of consciousness, no case of death or permanent neurological deficit was found. The largest group of head-injured characters was constituted by Romans (63.9%), while Gauls caused nearly 90% of the TBIs. A helmet had been worn by 70.5% of victims but had been lost in the vast majority of cases (87.7%). In 83% of cases, TBIs were caused under the influence of a doping agent called “the magic potion”.

Conclusions
Although over half of patients had an initially severe impairment of consciousness after TBI, no permanent deficit could be found. Roman nationality, hypoglossal paresis, lost helmet, and ingestion of the magic potion were significantly correlated with severe initial impairment of consciousness (p ≤ 0.05).

Sample Data:

Today’s “Whoa…” A tornado on the Sun.


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This footage was caught over a 30 hour period on February 7th and 8th.

…The tornado might be as large as the Earth itself and have gusts up to 300,000 miles per hour. By comparison, the strongest tornadoes on earth, F5 storms, clock wind speeds at a relatively paltry (though incredibly destructive) 300 mph.

Via NPR.

Wallace’s Condensed Primordial Soup – no artificial life, no MSG added, no cholesterol and no regrets.

Wallace’s Condensed Primordial Soup is made from Earth-grown organic ooze and a special blend of prebiotic compounds. For four billion years Wallace’s recipe has remained the same with hundreds of amino acids, no artificial life, no MSG added, no cholesterol and no regrets. Later life forms love it!

For sale and via 826DC. Note that Wallace is in reference to Alfred Russel Wallace.

Scientific journal format on how to make a baby (with a cute face).

From boingboing.net.

Batman has no time to pamper the family jewels. He’s got to analyse DNA samples first.

I always knew that my becoming a geneticist was a good career move… MUST use this image for a slide when talking about genetic testing, or maybe even personal genomics.

Via Hey Oscar Wilde.

The Universe: An awesome poster

by Mike Gottschalk. This and other astronomical scale posters for sale at society6.com

Famous villains expressed as mathematical equations

Via Imgur.

For my Dad

– – –

“My Dad beat up Bruce Lee…”

This, actually, is a true statement.

O.K., technically, the statement is mostly true – because depending on which of my Dad’s friends you ask, you might learn that it’s probably better to say that he “pushed Bruce Lee around” as oppose to “beat him up.” Still, regardless of which version you believe, it all sounds pretty impressive. Until, of course, you learn that my Dad was 10 at the time, whereas Bruce was about 8 years old.

This is why I often use this statement when I give talks about science and society. It nicely encapsulates the weaknesses behind describing things (such as science things) with only a soundbite – without the full context in place. The fact that my father beat up Bruce Lee has two completely different interpretations depending on your knowledge, or lack of knowledge, of that additional piece of context.

Secretly however, I also use the statement because I happen to think that it does make my Dad sound incredibly impressive (even if it does imply that he might have been a bit of a bully – although also possibly the true reason why Bruce Lee went on to become an expert in Kung Fu).

But that is because I know that my Dad was incredibly impressive. He had led a full and interesting life – a life that enriched others. Often, I’d hear stories of his youth, where he’d tell us that he was a stellar basketball player winning many school games. He would tell me that his favourite book as a child was The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling, which may of had something to do with being an avid boy scout. Indeed, he even rose to the ranks of Queen Scout (sort of like the Jedi of all scout ranks), and once got to shake the Queen’s hand. You should also know that my father was also a skilled civil engineer – so much so, that I’ll bet he was main reason why his particular track of Vancouver’s Skytrain is especially quiet and efficient. Finally, there is the story of when he was sick and admitted into a hospital in Hong Kong. Here, he was treated by a pretty nurse – a nurse he would return to and ask out, a nurse he would later date, marry, and begin that family life he so cherished.

These details would only skim the surface of why I consider him an inspiration. All told, he was a formidable engineer, a loving husband, a brilliant father and a great granddad. Quite simply, he was a truly wonderful human being.

Unfortunately, his life wasn’t always so wonderful. In fact, during the last ten or so years, life was quite rough. In 2000, he was formally diagnosed with Spinocerebellar Ataxia (SCA3), a neurodegenerative genetic disease that affects certain coordination abilities, often in a slow but drastic fashion. Over the years, there was a gradual but noticeable decline in his health. First, he would be wobbly, then he would need a cane, next a walker, and finally a wheelchair. It would become a challenge to write, speak, eat, even sit straight. It was, needless to say, heartbreaking for us all to see this unfold.

When Dad first learnt of his condition, it came to pass that I would also need to get tested for SCA3. This was because this particular disease is classified as an autosomal dominant, which meant that there was a 50% chance of Dad passing the defective gene to me. Furthermore, this test would also divulge my own fate in this matter. Essentially, by agreeing to such a test, I could find out whether I had received the good or defective copy.

During this whole episode, I remember thinking that this was, in a way, strangely fortuitous. Here I was, a geneticist, who revels in science education, and I had actually been granted an opportunity to experience firsthand that most iconic of all science ethics lessons – the genetic test. I even distinctly remember saying to myself, “This is so cool,” and saying this even before I found out that I had tested negative for the disease.

But nowadays, I don’t feel the same way. During those last few years, seeing what my Dad had to suffer through, has made me seriously re-evaluate that original sentiment. It certainly didn’t seem so cool anymore. Which again demonstrates how perspective truly is king. Indeed, depending on my mood, I might feel all sorts of different things.

I might be frustrated by the glacial pace of scientific research, and the challenges of various medical support systems. Or sometimes, I would feel real anger at the political and cultural backdrops that have stalled certain scientific discoveries, the kind that could have helped find treatments and/or helped increase comfort levels. Here, I know that SCA3 falls under similar pathologies to other CAG repeat neurodegenerative diseases, and as such, is a prime beneficiary of what some view as contentious stem cell research. But even in these dark moments, mostly, I feel like the best reaction is one of bitter inspiration, a kind of relentless feistiness that I need to compel me to do justice to my father’s memory. Something to fuel my heart to do something, anything that my father would deem worthy.

Of course, sometimes it’s just nice to feel nostalgic. To think of my Dad when he was able to walk and run and dance and hold us up. I don’t know why, but it’s strangely comforting to yearn for this better time, before the talk of tests, and before the genetic haunting. Fittingly, with these words from The Jungle Book, even Rudyard Kipling might agree:

“I will remember what I was, I am sick of rope and chains –
I will remember my old strength and all my forest affairs.
I will not sell my back to man for a bundle of sugar cane;
I will go out to my own kind, and the wood-folk in their lairs.
I will go out until the day, until the morning break –
Out to the wind’s untainted kiss, the water’s clean caress;
I will forget my ankle-ring and snap my picket stake.
I will revisit my lost love and playmates masterless!”

And although I’m not a religious type, I’d like to think that wherever Dad is now, he is walking again. This makes me feel a little bit better, but right now, truth be told, mostly I feel sadness.

.

Dad… I will love you always, and will be forever grateful for your presence in my life.

I will miss you terribly.

Your son, David.

– – –

John Kar Kee Ng, born March 8th, 1935, passed away on February 10th, 2012. May he rest in peace.

You can make a donation to the BC Ataxia Society using this  online donation form (there is a field on the online form to make the donation in memory of John Ng)

When the office of Stephen Hawking sends a fax…

This is awesome…

Via Fresh Photons.

Torso complete with internal organs, origami style!

By Horst Kiechle via Flickr.

Beautiful vintage illustration of clusters, nebulae and comets. #want

I would pay some serious money for this print. Does anyone know what book it came from?

Nice try Kim Kardashian. #quantumphysics

From thewhiteblankpagee.tumblr.com, via Fresh Photons.