Monday, November 29, 2010

The Doppler Effect

Today, November 29th, is the birthdate of the Austrian physicist Christian Doppler who was the first to describe how the observed frequency of light and sound waves is affected by the relative motion of the source of the wave and the detector.

Born in 1803, Doppler's work explains why trains (and other vehicles) moving towards us sound different from those which are stationary and those moving away from us. The Doppler Effect, proposed in 1842 is explained by the source of the wave (the train) moving towards the observer so that each successive wavepeak is emitted from a postion closer to the observer than the previous wave.

Therefore, each wave takes a little less time to reach the observer than the previous one.This means the wave peaks are sort of bunched together ahead of the vehicle, giving a higher pitch to he sound. The opposite is true behind the train, the wave peaks move further apart giving a lower pitch to the sound.

Sheldon from "The Big Bang Theory" explains the Doppler Effect:

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Mammal size exploded after dinosaurs

A team of international scientists have shown that when the dinosaurs became extinct some 65 million years ago, mammals began to get bigger - a lot bigger!

The study published this week in the journal Science, shows that mammals became a thousand times bigger than they had been once the dinosaurs were out of the way.

"Basically, the dinosaurs disappear and all of a sudden there is nobody else eating the vegetation. That's an open food source and mammals start going for it, and it's more efficient to be an herbivore when you're big," says paper co-author Dr. Jessica Theodor, associate professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of Calgary.

The mammals considered as part of the research includes Indricotherium transouralicum, a hornless, rhino-like herbivore that weighed about seventeen tonnes and stood about 18 feet high at the shoulder. That animal lived in Eurasia almost 34 million years ago.

The researchers gathered data on the maximum size for the major groups of land mammals on each continent, including Perissodactyla (odd-toed ungulates like horses and rhinos), Proboscidea (which includes elephants, mammoths and mastodon), Xenarthra (anteaters, tree sloths and armadillos), as well as a number of other extinct groups.

"that's really rapid evolution"Theodore says the results confirm that ecosystems can reset themselves relatively quickly after a major disruption: "You lose dinosaurs 65 million years ago, and within 25 million years the system is reset to a new maximum for the animals that are there in terms of body size. That's actually a pretty short time frame, geologically speaking," she says. "That's really rapid evolution."

The scientists found that mammals grew to a maximum of about 10 kg when they shared the earth with dinosaurs but up to 17 tonnes once the dinosaurs were gone.

The research, funded by a National Science Foundation Research Coordination Network grant, was led by scientists at the University of New Mexico, who brought together paleontologists, evolutionary biologists and macroecologists from universities around the world.

John Gittleman from the University of Georgia in the US was also involved in the research and says that there is a much better fossil record for mammals than for many other groups. "That's partly because mammals' teeth preserve really well. And as it happens, tooth size correlates well with overall body size" says Gittleman.

"During the Mesozoic, mammals were small," said Gittleman. "Once dinosaurs went extinct, mammals evolved to be much larger as they diversified to fill ecological niches that became available. This phenomenon has been well-documented for North America; we wanted to know if the same thing happened all over the world."

 Image: The largest land mammals that ever lived, Indricotherium (left) and Deinotherium (middle), would have towered over the living African elephant (right). [Credit: Alison Boyer/Yale University]

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

George Boole Lecture

Professor Des McHale will deliver the Annual Boole Lecture at UCC on December 7th 2010.

The Boole Lecture is an annual event that was established and is sponsored by the Boole Centre for Research in Informatics, the Cork Constraint Computation Centre, the Department of Computer Science, and The School of Mathematical Sciences.

Title: "GEORGE BOOLE — A PORTRAIT OF THE MAN AND HIS WORK"


Venue: G5 Western Gate Building, UCC at 8:00 pm

Admission is free. All are welcome

Monday, November 22, 2010

"Opposite the window of the room in which I write is a field, liable to be overflowed..."

In the last few months, I've written extensively on the subject of George Boole and his legacy in Cork and, in particular, his former home at Grenville Place.

Number 5, Grenville Place suffered a severe collapse last month and has subsequently required significant partial demolition.

While I don't believe last year's severe flooding in Cork City centre (the first anniversary of which was marked on Friday last) was a significant cause of the collapse, it appears that Boole could have warned of us of the possible dangers faced by this part of the city.

Grenville Place is one of two sites in the city where the quay wall was demolished by the impact of the flood waters. One year on, the sandbags still remain in situ and the historic quay walls remain in ruins.

According to the Boole collection of papers in UCC's Boole Library, the emminant mathematician was in Cork during the 'Great Flood' of 1850 when he was trapped upstairs in his lodgings at Grenville Place and his friends were forced to traverse the streets in a boat. How familiar this sounds to those present near Grenville Place last year.

Number five was where Boole wrote his most important work: An investigation into the Laws of Thought, on which are founded the Mathematical Theories of Logic and Probabilities.

On page 321 of this text, Boole discusses risk and uses and example which planners would have done well to have noted:

"Opposite the window of the room in which I write is a field, liable to be overflowed from two causes, distinct, but capable of being combined, viz., floods from the upper sources of the River Lee, and tides from the ocean."

This field now forms part of UCC/Mercy Hospital lands at Distillery Field and is traversed by Cork City Council's Banks of the Lee walkway. The site suffered severe flooding on November 19th 2009.

Ironically, opposite the window of the room in which I write is the same field and as we have again seen, it is liable to be overflowed.

{Image Credit: bosco via archiseek.com Flooding at Grenville Place, Cork with Distillery Field across the river}

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Great News for Science Blogging

Congratulations to Frog Bloggers Jeremy Stone and Humphrey Jones for taking home the 'Big Mouth' award from the Eircom Spiders which were held in Dublin's Burlington Hotel last Thursday night.

The fact that two science blogs were nominated in this category and that the Frog Blog took the prize home is great news for Irish science blogging which is going from strength to strength at the moment.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Agriculture: Here are the questions...now what are the answers?

A multidisciplinary team of 55 agricultural and food experts from 23 countries have come together to identify the 100 "Questions of Importance" to the Future of world agriculture.

Dr. Colin Sage, from UCC's Department of Geography was the sole contibutor from Ireland.

"We need to build greater resilience and adaptability into the global food system and that is likely to involve giving more serious attention to encouraging shifts in patterns of consumption as well as to finding ways of producing more food more sustainably" said Dr. Sage.

The authors began with an initial list of 618 questions before reducing them to the top 100 over a year long period. Thirteen themes were identified as priority to global agriculture and food production.

These themes include "Climate, watersheds, water resources and aquatic ecosystems" as well as a theme on "Crop genetic improvement" and "Consumption patterns and health".

The report was published in the International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability and is free to download here.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Science Snapshot Eight: Infra-red

Science Week in Ireland concludes today. For more details of events taking place around the country, you can visit here.

Here on Communicate Science, for the duration of Science Week, along with our usual posts, we posted a 'Science Snapshot' every day. If you have a Science Snapshot you'd like to share, you can email here and we may feature it in the future.

Today's image also comes from the Elder Museum of Science & Technology in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.

It simply features yours truly photographed on a infra-red camera.

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