May 22, 2009
In Honors recently we’ve been looking at electricity, and the question was posed to me: “how much current does it take to kill a person?” I didn’t really have an answer that I was sure of, but this morning I found an article that has one: just 7 mA, applied directly to the heart for 3 seconds, will do the job. That is 7 milliamps, about 60 times smaller than the current flowing through one of the small light bulbs on the circuit boards when connected to the 3 V batteries.
And it was Adam Savage from the Mythbusters that said it, so it must be true!
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Uncategorized | Tagged: electricity |
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Posted by Wahlgren
May 20, 2009
I’ve written before about how nuclear power is the best carbon-free electricity source at the moment. Not to say that others like wind and solar will never work, but they’re not viable to use on a large scale at the moment, and won’t be without several more years and a lot more money for research. If we’re going to cut carbon emissions drastically starting soon, nuclear is the only way to go.
There is still a large percentage of the population that resists nuclear power, and this is because most people are just uninformed. I’ll admit that nuclear stuff is scary, and if something goes really wrong the results are really bad. One of those really bad things happened at Chernobyl in 1986, and people are afraid it might happen again. Rightfully so, I think.
The big problem with the public resistance to nuclear power, though, is people like Ken Gale. As far as I can tell, he’s not an expert on anything except comic books, yet he has written this article about the safety issues of the nuclear power plant at Indian Point, New York. He says a lot of scary things, and anybody who reads this would be crazy to embrace nuclear power.
The problem is this: barely anything he’s said on that site is actually true. His claims that the plant regularly releases radioactive gas, it releases radioactive and thermal pollution into the river, the high level waste is stored in open pools, and that New York wouldn’t notice if the plant was shut off are ludicrous. None of those statements is even remotely close to fact. The author claims to have researched the page, but he doesn’t list his sources so I don’t know where he got this “information.”
If you’re going to oppose nuclear power, at least do some real research before you do. Inform yourself before taking a stance either way. Be skeptical of any claims for or against, do your homework, and make up your own mind.
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Uncategorized | Tagged: alternative energy, nuclear power |
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Posted by Wahlgren
May 18, 2009
After the Hubble Space Telescope was repaird in 1993, the photos it sent back were nothing short of stunning. Humans had never seen the universe in that way before, and more scientific papers have been written from Hubble’s images than any other piece of scientific equipment in history.
There is a space shuttle mission happening right now (STS-125), in which the crew of Atlantis is making some modifications, upgrades, and repairs. These repairs are intended to allow the telescope to function until 2014, at which time Hubble will be decommissioned after more than 20 years in space.
This series of photos from The Big Picture is pretty amazing and features the astronauts and scenery from the mission. My personal favorite is #18 with the shuttle and telescope silhouetted by the sun.
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Uncategorized | Tagged: photos |
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Posted by Wahlgren
May 4, 2009
A few Honors classes today got a few problems like this:
Use any arithmetic operation +-x÷or () to make these numbers equal 24.
3, 5, 6, 7 (answer [6-5+7]x3=24)
This is a common game that is great for building logic skills and number sense. If you’d like to play more on your own, try this link. It’s good for your brain.
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Uncategorized | Tagged: logic, puzzles, random |
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Posted by Wahlgren