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The Physics of Beer

In honor of Oktoberfest and my last day as an APS intern, here's a post dedicated to one of the greatest inventions of all time: Beer. [Wunderbar!] The secret to a good beer? Pressure! When it comes to beer, it's all about carbonation. Every vessel containing beer, from a glass to a keg, to cans and bottles, is created to keep beer fizzy and foamy down to the last drop.

The Tevatron's Last Run

After 28 years of leading research in high energy particle physics, the Tevatron is shutting down today. Farewell, Tevatron , you had a great run. Thanks to everyone who helped to build and operate this amazing machine.

Pixelated Art on the American Center for Physics

As her farewell to Physics Buzz and the American Physical Society, Echo Romeo left us some art crafted in Post It notes on the building windows. (I helped a bit.)

Live Chat on Neutrinos today at 3PM EST

Today at 3:00PM eastern time, Science magazine will be hosting an hour-long discussion on the debate over the recent faster-than-light (supposedly) neutrinos announcement out of CERN. Science's Dan Clery will be hosting this discussion, which will include guests Alan Kostelecky and Alfons Weber. To participate, or just listen in, surf on over to the Science chat site .

Shirt Happens: Pretty's Got Nothing To Do With It.

www.washingtonpost.com Recently there was a lot of controversy surrounding a shirt sold by JC Penny's saying that " I'm too pretty to do homework so my brother has to do it for me ." I, for one, am glad about the whole kerfuffle because it brought to the forefront something that is still an issue for most girls and women, that if you are pretty, you can't be smart and if you are smart you can't be pretty. Pretty girls are often judged to be "dumb blonds" and those getting straight A's aren't that attractive. "Boys don't make passes at girls that wear glasses" as the saying goes. This idea is out there and around us all the time but is rarely talked about openly until something like this shirt happens. It is this pervasive idea that led many, many people to think this shirt was a good idea in the first place. And that's just wrong. But some good things have come out of all of this. There is one response to this

Faster than Light Neutrinos sure ain't Cold Fusion

The recent detection of faster-than-light neutrinos may turn out to be an error, but this experiment was no cold fusion fiasco. [The OPERA neutrino detector on the left is leagues above the cold fusion cell on the right.] Lots of people in the news, in university hallways, and even in cartoon form are urging caution against putting too much confidence in the measurement of neutrinos that travel faster than light. Many of them have suggested that the whole thing looks a lot like the ill-fated cold fusion announcement of 1989.

NASA's airborne telescope will always be state of the art

Imagine pointing a telescope out of your car window and scouring the heavens for new clues about the origins of the universe while cruising down the highway. That’s what SOFIA – NASA’s and the German Aerospace Center’s Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy - does only it’s mounted in the back of a Boeing-747 flying at 500 miles per hour at 40,000 feet. [SOFIA, the 'Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy,' stopped at Joint Base Andrews near Camp Springs, Md., Sept. 22 on it's way back from Germany to its home at NASA's Dryden Aircraft Operations Facility in California. SOFIA is the world's largest airborne observatory.] [The infrared telescope on board SOFIA is at the rear of the Boeing-747.The lens mirror itself is behind the white wall. The silver equipment at left is one of several interchangeable instruments that can be attached to the telescope.]

Physicists Report Evidence of a Faster-Than-Light Particle

In what would represent the biggest physics discovery in the century thus far if confirmed, researchers announced that they have measured particles traveling faster than the speed of light, which -- at least up to now -- has been the speed limit of everything in the universe. [Image courtesy of the OPERA Collaboration] Researchers from the OPERA (Oscillation Project with Emulsion-tRacking Apparatus) experiment presented their results on Friday at a seminar at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, following a preprint post Thursday night on the science website arXiv.

Live webcast from CERN

Physics enthusiasts at the American Center for Physics take a break mid-morning to watch the 10 a.m. EDT press conference about the CERN discovery that neutrinos may travel faster than the speed of light. To watch the archived press conference, go here .

Calculating the (Unlikely) Odds of NASA Satellite Casualties

How did NASA come up with the 1 in 3200 chance of anyone on Earth being hit by pieces of the Upper Atmosphere Research satellite (UARS) due to crash on Friday? We contacted NASA yesterday to ask them what goes into their estimate of the risks that incoming satellites present. In short, the answer we received from NASA's Nick Johnson is "A complex computer program called ORSAT is used," to do the calculation. (The complete NASA reply is available at the end of this post.) That's cool, but computer output is only as good as the input and programming. In my experience, it's always a good idea to get out a pencil and paper to make sure the computer's answer makes sense. So I thought I'd try to estimate the odds UARS hitting anyone all by myself. Here goes . . .

Teaching With Portals: Videogames in the Classroom

To make a good video game, certain laws of physics can be ignored. For example, if I am floating through space killing ice aliens, I REALLY want to be able to use my flamethrower. (I’m not sure if that game exists yet, but if it doesn’t… free idea.) Unfortunately, boring old reality dictates that in order to burn, fire needs oxygen, of which outer space is lacking. Ignoring this truth leads to a much more enjoyable rampage, and in the meantime I could still accidentally learn a thing or two about the laws of universal gravitation. One actual video game series that runs with this concept of adapting physics is Portal. In Portal, you control a human test subject that obeys all the conventional laws of physics. However, your character has a gun that can create a wormhole between any two surfaces you shoot. Jump in one portal and you emerge from the other. Put one on the floor and the other on the ceiling above, and you can fall through an infinite loop.

Diamonds: Telling the Tale of an Epic Journey

Diamonds formed in the lower mantle carry the record of Earth's carbon cycle. [Like an insect in amber, mineral inclusions trapped in diamonds can reveal much about the Earth’s deep interior. Image cr edit: Science/AAAS] Hundreds of millions of years ago, six diamonds formed in our planet's lower mantle began a remarkable journey up to the surface of the world. They emerged in a diamond mine in Brazil, a travelogue of an epic voyage.

New research may explain high runup from tsunami waves

Coastal residents need to know that when it comes to tsunamis, there may not be just one wave and the first wave isn’t always the biggest, three scientists are saying. Their new research shows that tsunami waves and coastline slopes might combine to create resonance that amplifies the water coming onshore. Contrary to what many people might believe, a tsunami travels not as a single large wave but in a wave train of several large waves. The height a given wave reaches when it comes onshore is called runup. This is different from a wave’s inundation which is how far it travels horizontally – or inland – when coming onshore. Though scientists have known for a while that the first wave in a tsunami train doesn't always produce the highest runup, they have struggled to explain why. New research published Friday in Physical Review Letters details how the three researchers used a computer model to show that a tsunami’s frequency – how closely in time one wave follows another – combine

Why are there so many contrails today?

Driving in to work this morning, I noticed there were an awful lot of contrails in the sky. Why, I wondered, were there so many today? [Holy contrails, Batman!] Is it because it's a cold day today? Perhaps because we just had a front come through? To find out, I gave my old meteorology professor from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University a call. My guess is that you have a lot of moisture in the air there right now, Dr. Randell Barry said. Really? That's it? It's all because of water vapor? I'll explain it to you how he explained it to me. From the beginning...

Solar Bottle SuperHero

Solar Demi is a man who travels around installing solar bottles in order to bring light into homes in some of the poorest neighborhoods in the Philippines. It's amazing to me that there are places where even minimal lighting is a luxury. I'm glad to see that basic physics principles are bringing a little sunlight into the dark days of some impoverished Filipinos. (Of course, if you feel like sending a donation to the cause , you can help spread the light and the love a little further.) I've seen a lot of speculation about how, and even whether, solar bottles can light a room so well. The fact is, they do work, and they rely on some pretty nifty physics to do it.

Mathlete Takes a Tumble, But How?

My blogger name is "Mathlete" because in my spare time I'm a triathlete. There is a whole lot of physics in swimming, biking and running. I learned this past weekend there is also a lot of physics in crashing. I was racing in the Mighty Hamptons Olympic Distance triathlon (1 mile swim, 24 mile bike, 6.2 mile run) on Sunday and about half way through the bike section, my back wheel stopped rotating and I ended up falling (for gross pictures, see below). After getting over the shock, I looked to see why my wheel had stopped. I have spent 3 days trying to use physics to explain what I saw and simply have not been able to. Can you guys help? When I looked at my back wheel, I saw that a water bottle, 2/3 full of gatorade, had lodged itself half between my spokes. The bottle was about half way through, parallel to the axis of rotation of the wheel. I have a fancy dancy Cervelo P3 (affectionately named Firebolt) with an airplane wing frame so for aerodynamic reasons

Heat is the paintbrush in iron meteorite art

[What is this? Perhaps abstract expressionism or a new kind of carbon fiber, you might think. Would you believe me if I told you it's the inside of a meteorite? Photo by Kevin Walsh.] Walking through the geology hall in the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C., a few weeks ago, I was struck by what looked like a Jackson Pollock painting on the face of a rock. In fact, it wasn't a rock at all but instead part of an iron meteorite and what had looked like artwork was actually its interior. Beautiful! Some meteorites are stony but others, like the one that caught my eye, are made of iron and nickel alloys (mixtures of two or more elements). Not all iron meteorites look like abstract paintings on the inside, but most do. [Two iron meteorites are on display at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C.] Originally, these meteorites were made of only one very hot alloy, called taenite. As the taenite cooled very slowly over time - as little

(Possible) Solution to the Fermi Overpopulation Problem

The problem I posed last week was, "How much income you need before it makes sense to have fewer children rather than more?" [A view of Dahka street crowds, Ahron de Leeuw ] The answer I've come up with, in case you can't stand the suspense, is this - Up to a point, the more money you have the fewer kids you need, but once people reach middle class, the more money they have the more kids they want.

Fermi Problem Friday - Overpopulation Problem

By Halloween this year, the world population is expected to exceed 7 billion people . Are there sensible ways to slow down or reverse the trend? Fertility rate by nation. The poorest countries tend to have the highest numbers of children per family. Seven billion sounds like a lot of people, and I can understand why many folks feel like it's one of the most pressing issues facing the world today. Among the solutions I've seen promoted are education campaigns and birth control distribution. But there may be better ways to deal with the population explosion.