Quote of the day!

January 15th, 2008

From the New York Times science section:

Although it’s impossible to calculate the pain that terrorist attacks inflict on victims and society, when statisticians look at cold numbers, they have variously estimated the chances of the average person dying in America at the hands of international terrorists to be comparable to the risk of dying from eating peanuts, being struck by an asteroid or drowning in a toilet.

(emphasis mine)

The rest of the article is more serious, telling you that panicking over terrorism might hurt you – citing an increased risk of heart problems among the more fearful.

Still, though, I can’t help but wonder if upcoming political ads might feature one of the presidential hopefuls boldly announcing his plan to protect us from our toilets.

“We’ll flush them over there so we don’t have to flush them here!”

Heresy is not just for biologists!

January 15th, 2008

BBC News reports that the current Pope has canceled his upcoming visit to La Sapienza University. Why?  He’s afraid of the faculty and students!

Sixty-seven academics had said the Pope condoned the 1633 trial and conviction of the astronomer Galileo for heresy.

While 1633 was indeed a long time ago, Pope Benedict (before becoming Pope) had approvingly quoted a philosopher’s argument that Galileo’s conviction was “rational and just”. This would be the trial that made Galileo recant the now obvious notion that the Sun is at the center of the Solar System, forcing him to say:

I, Galileo, son of the late Vincenzio Galilei of Florence, seventy years of age, arraigned personally for judgment, kneeling before you Most Eminent and Most Reverend Cardinals Inquisitors-General against heretical depravity in all of Christendom, having before my eyes and touching with my hands the Holy Gospels, swear that I have always believed, I believe now, and with God’s help I will believe in the future all that the Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church holds, preaches, and teaches. However, whereas, after having been judicially instructed with injunction by the Holy Office to abandon completely the false opinion that the sun is the center of the world and does not move and the earth is not the center of the world and moves, and not to hold defend, or teach this false doctrine in any way whatever, orally or in writing; and after having been notified that this doctrine is contrary to Holy Scripture; I wrote and published a book in which I treat of this already condemned doctrine and adduce very effective reasons in its favor, without refuting them in any way; therefore, I have been judged vehemently suspected of heresy, namely of having held and believed that the sun is the center of the world and motionless and the earth is not the center and moves.

Therefore, desiring to removed from the minds of Your Eminences and every faithful Christian this vehement suspicion, rightly conceived against me, with a sincere heart and unfeigned faith I abjure, curse, and detest the above-mentioned errors and heresies, and in general each and every other error, heresy, and sect contrary to the Holy Church; and I swear that in the future I will never again say or assert, orally or in writing, anything which might cause a similar suspicion about me; on the contrary, if I should come to know any heretic or anyone suspected of heresy, I will denounce him to this Holy Office, or to the Inquisitor or Ordinary of the place where I happen to be.

This trial was, of course, neither rational nor just, and the Italian academics are right to hold Pope Benedict accountable for implying that it was. Instead, it is one of the more well-known early examples of religion suppressing science, and it’s absurd to try to spin it as anything else.

At least Pope John Paul II had the sense to admit that Galileo’s inquisitors goofed.

A curious admission

January 14th, 2008

It’s a week old, but The State has an article up about what South Carolina’s GOP voters are most worried about in this election cycle. Apparently, the big issue is illegal immigration.

Polls have shown immigration is more important to Republican voters in South Carolina than it is to Democrats. In fact, S.C. GOP backers have made immigration their top issue in choosing a president.

What do South Carolina Republicans have to say about the issue?

“This is the new Confederate flag issue in South Carolina on the Republican side,” said Neal Thigpen, a political science professor at Francis Marion University and a Republican.

The new Confederate flag issue? Oh, dear.
By rallying their voters around immigration, it’s as if the Republicans are admitting that they’ve got nothing worthwhile to offer on health care, or the war in Iraq, or education, or the economy, or … you name it. Instead, they’ll bravely protect us from Dora and Diego.

The fast growth is something South Carolinians notice in their daily activities whether they see Hispanics at the grocery store or working on a neighbor’s roof, Thigpen said. They begin to wonder if another ethnic group is taking over.

Wow. Just … wow.

Studying the obvious

January 3rd, 2008

Kellie sent me a link to a study recently conducted at Clemson. It’s more likely that you’ll swerve out of your lane if you’re text messaging or messing with your iPod while you’re driving:

Text messaging and using iPods caused drivers to leave their lanes 10 percent more often in a simulated driving study conducted by researchers in the Clemson University psychology department.

[…]

Drivers who simply talked on cell phones were distracted and had slower reaction times but tended to stay in their own lane, however drivers who looked away from the road to use electronics were significantly more likely to leave their lane, said Johnell Brooks, assistant professor of psychology.

It’s not the results of the study that I want to hilight. The study, after all, tells us exactly what we expect: it’s not smart to text while driving. If you click the link above, you’ll see that the site describing the study allows comments. As I’m writing this post, the comments all say about the same thing. Here’s a sample:

And this is the college everyone raves about? Sounds like the only thing this place can do right is get drunk. What a waste of money. Ho[ne]stly I don’t think they should have even admitted they were doing this study because common sense would have given them the answer.

Commenters complained that the study was a waste of money and effort because the results confirm “common sense”. The problem with that argument is simply this: Common sense is commonly wrong. Because of this, it’s a good idea to actually test out things we think are “obvious”. You don’t have to dig very deeply in science to find a good example of common sense failing. Just consider fire.

[Burning log cartoon]

When you burn a piece of wood, you get ash. The ash is lighter than the original wood. Common sense dictates that burning must be the loss of something within the wood.

During much of the eighteenth century, that something was called “phlogiston”, and the loss of phlogiston was obviously responsible for the difference in mass between wood and ash. Anything that burns must contain phlogiston, and that’s why ash is always lighter that the substance being burned.

We now know, however, that the sentence above is false. Burning doesn’t require the loss of anything. Instead, the burning process is the combination of a substance with oxygen from the air. How did we find that out? By actually testing the “common sense” idea!

More careful analysis of burning wood revealed that if you account for all of the gases given off, the gases and the ash together weigh more than the original wood.

It’s even more convincing to look at the burning of metals. No gases are released by the burning of metals like magnesium, so all you have to do to collect everything given off is to burn the magnesium in a container with a loose-fitting lid. It’s easy to show that the ash left behind weighs more than the original metal, and my intro chemistry students do this in lab.

The weight gain was eventually discovered by Lavosier to be due to oxygen.

So, don’t laugh too hard when some scientist seems to be testing something that’s “common sense”. It’s true that common sense isn’t very common, but it’s also true that common sense isn’t always … sense!

New Year’s Recycling: The many phases of iodine

January 2nd, 2008

For my first post of the new year, here’s an improved version of an old post. I’m using the images from the post in one of my chemistry classes this spring, and I thought I’d share the improved pictures.


Iodine is one of the more unusual things you can find at your family drug store. In pure form, it’s a somewhat shiny solid. From appearance alone, you might mistake solid iodine for some of the things you’d find in the rock bins at Black Market Minerals in Myrtle Beach.

[Solid iodine]
Solid iodine

What makes iodine unusual? Iodine’s a solid that goes easily from the solid to the gas phase. Also, once iodine gets into the gas phase, it is not colorless and invisible. Iodine vapor is bright purple in color. Solid iodine slowly sublimes (goes from the solid state to the vapor) at room temperature, but you can speed up the process quite a bit by supplying a little heat.If iodine vapor comes into contact with a cold surface, it will deposit (resolidify) on the surface, forming pretty crystals. The same thing happens when water vapor in the atmosphere comes into contact with an extremely cold car windshield – making frost.

To show the phase changes of iodine, I set up an experiment similar to a demonstration from one of my old chemistry books. I took some solid iodine and put it into a beaker, then set the beaker on a hotplate. On top of the beaker, I put a watch glass: a curved piece of glass shaped a little like a shallow bowl. On top of the watch glass, I put some ice. The ice cools the watch glass.

[Iodine experimental setup]
Setup

To speed up the production of iodine vapor, I turned the hotplate on “low”. After a few minutes, I could just see the color of iodine vapor in the beaker.

[Small amount of iodine vapor]
A little vapor is visible

Once the hotplate’s temperature gets to about 114 oC (237 oF), the iodine begins to melt, forming a dark purple liquid. The amount of iodine in the vapor state increases.

[More iodine vapor]
More vapor is visible. If you value your nose, keep it away from the vapor.

After more heating, you can see all three phases of iodine inside the beaker.
[Iodine: Solid, liquid, and gas]
Pick a phase, any phase!

There is a mixture of solid and liquid iodine at the bottom of the beaker. Since the hotplate is providing heat energy, some of the solid iodine melts, forming liquid. Some solid iodine also sublimes, forming vapor. The liquid iodine evaporates, forming more vapor.

Near the top of the beaker and on the cooler upper sides of the beaker, iodine vapor deposits, forming solid iodine crystals. Some iodine vapor condenses to liquid on the warmer lower walls of the beaker, and that liquid then freezes to solid iodine. That’s a total of six different phase changes going on all at once; and we haven’t even discussed the ice on top of the beaker.

The ice? The ice at the top of the beaker melts, removing energy from the iodine vapor and helping it deposit on the bottom of the cold watch glass.

[Deposited iodine crystals]
Deposited iodine crystals, forming from purple iodine vapor

The iodine crystals on the watch glass are flat and shiny – almost metallic in appearance. They look a bit like stalactites.

[Deposited iodine crystals, closer view]
Deposited iodine crystals, closer view

I advise against attempting this experiment yourself, since iodine looks more harmless than it is. Iodine won’t blow up on you – provided you keep it away from combustibles, but iodine can cause chemical burns on contact. Iodine vapors are harmful to the lungs. This sort of experiment needs a fume hood, and solid iodine shouldn’t be handled directly. Plus, buying lots of iodine might make some folks think you’re going to start a meth lab.

Have a ball this Christmas!

December 25th, 2007

The Shrimp and Grits family hopes you’re having a ball this Christmas!

[Cate decorating the tree, 450px]

Yes, Cate really did help to hang decorations on the tree this year.

Later, she removed at least as many from the tree as she hung!

The FDA’s war on my nose

December 15th, 2007

Patty pointed out to me that the FDA has ruled that phenylephrine-containing over-the-counter congestion remedies are “…probably effective, but it’s murky.”

I can remember my first experience with phenylephrine – back when the meth scare was just kicking into high gear and stores had started selling pseudoephedrine behind the counter. I quite often have nasal congestion problems, and Sudafed had always worked for me. So I grabbed a box of Sudafed PE, not realizing that it contained a different decongestant. (I was in a hurry, and I had naively assumed that Sudafed PE – the only Sudafed on the shelf – was traditional pseudoephedrine-containing Sudafed.) For all the good it did me, it may as well have been homeopathic nasal decongestant. It probably had some sort of effect on me, but it sure as heck didn’t clear my nose. After a day of suffering, I read the box more closely and noticed that the decongestant in the Sudafed PE was different. The next day I bought some pseudoephedrine.

So it doesn’t surprise me at all to hear researchers saying that

“If you have a stuffy nose, and you take an over-the-counter product containing phenylephrine, you will still not be able to breathe through your nose after you take it. That’s the bottom line,” Leslie Hendeles, a professor of pharmacy and pediatrics at the University of Florida, contended before the advisers met.

“There needs to be a dose-response study where you look a 10-, 25- and 50-milligram doses and determine what dose would give you a relief of your stuffy nose without side effects,” he said.

… or we could go back to selling a decongestant that has worked just fine for years, and for which a safe and effective dose is already known.

Too much information?

December 12th, 2007

For a while, I’ve maintained a website for the students in my chemistry classes. I put study guides, notes, solutions to quizzes and tests, schedules, and various other things on the site.

Shortly after redesigning the web site to use WordPress, I received this handwritten comment from a student on my instructor evaluations:

I feel that the students should get study guides to study with for the tests.

Where were the study guides?

http://[address]/?page_id=2

I’ve deleted the address of the site, since it’s a school site just for students. But if you’re familiar with how WordPress organizes things, you’ll notice that the page containing all the course study guides was the second page I ever posted to the site. (It was also the second link from the top of the page, just under the link to the course syllabus.)

By the time the class got to their first test, I’d added more pages. So I wonder – did this student just see the list of resources available for the course and just decide that there was too much stuff to bother with? What amount of resources is too much? What amount is too little?

South Carolina: Why we’re dumb, and why we’ll continue to be

December 12th, 2007

It looks like we’ve just unleashed a whole boatload of stupidity here in South Carolina:

Kristin Maguire of Clemson was elected today to be the leader of the state Board of Education in 2009.

Maguire, who teaches her four daughters at home, was nominated from the floor during the panel’s regularly scheduled monthly meeting.

Who’s to blame? I blame the whole board – who elected Maguire via voice vote. I can only hope we regain some sense in South Carolina before my own daughter is old enough to attend school.

Sheesh.

Why is this a problem, aside from the obvious? See the causes Maguire supports here.

(Via the Rev BigDumbChimp)

I like this ad …

December 11th, 2007

Via Think Progress, here’s an ad that makes you think a bit about our health care system:

If he were anyone else, he’d probably be dead by now. The patient’s history and prognosis were grim: four heart attacks, quadruple bypass surgery, angioplasty, an implanted defibrillator and now an emergency procedure to treat an irregular heartbeat. For millions of Americans, this might be a death sentence. For [him], it was just another medical treatment. And it cost him very little.

Who’s “he”?  If you didn’t click the link to the ad, “he” is Vice President Dick Cheney, who likely doesn’t have a fraction of the trouble you or I do getting access to health care.  Or paying the avalanche of bills that come after.

The rest of the ad talks about a house bill proposing a single-payer health care system for the US.   While I don’t think we’ll get single payer in the very near future, it seems like a good thing to work towards.   We should be ashamed – as a society – that any American has to go without health care.