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Blog archive

December 2024

November 2024

Event of Remembrance
11/22/2024

Phishing Scams: What You Need to Know
11/22/2024

Pupusas Family Style: Another Adventurous Dining Winner
11/22/2024

Celebrating the Holidays
11/21/2024

Genealogy Group: Discovering Our Pasts
11/21/2024

Nathan Wolford – From Tragedy to Ministry
11/21/2024

Pasadena Village Board of Directors: A Brief Overview
11/21/2024

President's Message
11/21/2024

The Day of the Dead (Dia de muertos)/ Mexican Culture/Community
11/21/2024

Vintage Celebration: Aging Like a Fine Wine
11/21/2024

Review of Racism in Our Local Past
11/20/2024

Creative Juices Flow in The Village
11/19/2024

Checking In by Ed Rinderle
11/15/2024

Eagle Poem by Joy Harjo
11/15/2024

I Shall Forget You Presently, My Dear (Sonnet IV) by Edna St. Vincent Millay
11/15/2024

Pictures From Brueghel by William Carlos Williams
11/15/2024

October 2024

ARBORIST WALK: NOT FOR TREE HUGGERS ONLY!
10/29/2024

Bill Wishner: Visual Hunter
10/29/2024

Can a Village Group Fix Our Healthcare System?
10/29/2024

Community Board Directors Strengthen Village Board
10/29/2024

Connecting with Village Connections: The A, B, C, & D’s of Medicare @ 65+
10/29/2024

Grief is a Journey: Two Paths Taken
10/29/2024

Message from the President
10/29/2024

Promoting Informed & Involved Voters
10/29/2024

What Will Be Your Legacy?
10/29/2024

1619, Approaching the Election...
10/27/2024

Beyond and Within the Village - A Star is Born
10/17/2024

Happiness by Priscilla Leonard
10/11/2024

Those Winter Sundays by Robert Hayden
10/11/2024

Unpainted Door by Louise Gluck
10/11/2024

In the Evening by Billy Collins
10/10/2024

Wild Geese by Mary Oliver
10/10/2024

Betty Kilby, A Family History
10/01/2024

Betty Kilby, A Family History
10/01/2024

Betty Kilby, A Family History
10/01/2024

September 2024

August 2024

1619 Wide Ranging Interests
08/19/2024

1619 Wide Ranging Interests
08/19/2024

First Anniversary
08/19/2024

Alexandra Leaving by Leonard Cohen
08/16/2024

Muse des Beaux Arts by W. H. Auden
08/16/2024

The God Abandons Antony by Constantinos P. Cavafy
08/16/2024

Ch – Ch – Ch –Changes
08/15/2024

Cultural Activities Team offers an ‘embarrassment of riches’
08/15/2024

Engaging in Pasadena Village
08/15/2024

Future Housing Options
08/15/2024

Message from the President
08/15/2024

There Are Authors Among Us
08/15/2024

Villagers Welcome New Members at the Tournament Park Picnic
08/15/2024

Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night by Dylan Thomas
08/14/2024

A narrow Fellow in the Grass by Emily Dickinson
08/13/2024

Haikus
08/13/2024

One Art by Elizabeth Bishop
08/13/2024

Poem 20 by Pablo Neruda
08/13/2024

Still I Rise by Maya Angelou
08/13/2024

Trees by Joyce Kilmer
08/13/2024

July 2024

June 2024

May 2024

Emergency Preparedness: Are You Ready?
05/28/2024

Farewell from the 2023/24 Social Work Interns
05/28/2024

Gina on the Horizon
05/28/2024

Mark Your Calendars for the Healthy Aging Research California Virtual Summit
05/28/2024

Meet Our New Development Associate
05/28/2024

Putting the Strategic Plan into Practice
05/28/2024

Washington Park: Pasadena’s Rediscovered Gem
05/28/2024

Introducing Civil Rights Discussions
05/22/2024

Rumor of Humor #2416
05/14/2024

Rumor of Humor #2417
05/14/2024

Rumor of Humor #2417
05/14/2024

Rumor of Humor #2418
05/14/2024

Springtime Visitors
05/07/2024

Freezing for a Good Cause – Credit, That Is
05/02/2024

No Discussion Meeting on May 3rd
05/02/2024

An Apparently Normal Person Author Presentation and Book-signing
05/01/2024

Flintridge Center: Pasadena Village’s Neighbor That Changes Lives
05/01/2024

Pasadena Celebrates Older Americans Month 2024
05/01/2024

The 2024 Pasadena Village Volunteer Appreciation Lunch
05/01/2024

Woman of the Year: Katy Townsend
05/01/2024

April 2024

March 2024

February 2024

January 2024

Science: Plasticity, DNA, Universe Theory

By Bob Snodgrass
Posted: 07/13/2021
Tags:

Attending: Barbara, Howard, Gretchen, Bruce, Dave, Bob

We had a pleasant meeting, better than the last one in spite of my wi-fi problems.  Everybody brought an item and had many comments. After the meeting, I complained about my problems with the building wi-fi and was given my own personal router and modem. Things should be better in August.


Barbara led off with an article from the Wall Street Journal about brain plasticity in the setting of albinism and severe visual problems. Albinism is a heterogenous condition; all affected have some degree of visual handicap. The single most important factor in the visual handicap is abnormal crossing of visual fibers at the optic chiasm. Retinal pigmentary abnormalities and nystagmus, an involuntary movement of the eyes, are usually less significant. Most children with nystagmus see a stable visual image but may have to get very close to a book or other visual target. With both central and peripheral components of visual impairment, it is still possible to improve, as the brain adapts or learns how to deal with degraded information. Barbara also gave us a brief report about ‘dragon man’ a recent fossil at the bottom of a well in Harbin, China with a very large skull, speculated as a possible Denisovan, a new species in the hominid tree of life or perhaps a mosaic due to interbreeding. We’ll need more data to clarify these issues.


Howard reported about a new twist in crime scene DNA analysis, DNA analysis of trees. Here, DNA analysis was used to convict two men of stealing valuable trees from public land (in the Olympic National Forest) and selling them to sawmills. The case turned on the DNA analysis which showed that the wood sold must have come from the Olympic National Forest with a probability of a chance finding being one to the 10th followed by 36 zeroes.


Gretchen continued the same thread reporting that spectroscopy was being used more and more to detect fake paintings. Various early 18th century scientists described the light and dark lines in the prismatic spectrum from sunlight and various terrestrial light sources
 William Fox Talbot first suggested, in 1826, that the distinctive line patterns could be used in chemical analysis. Talbot was a giant in the history of photography who developed what he called the calotype process, the precursor of negative-positive photography. There are many different forms of spectroscopy – I used atomic absorption spectroscopy in the early 1970s. Raman spectroscopy, named after its inventor, became the principal method of chemical analysis in the 1940s. A tiny piece of pigment can be removed from the painting, combusted and its spectrum analyzed. Each kind of spectroscopy has advantages and disadvantages. Spectroscopy is very important in astronomy and astrophysics..


Bruce brought many comments and brief reports. He was especially interested in flying cars and a flying Renault. The first roadable fixed wing aircraft actually to fly was built by 
Waldo Waterman, associated with Curtiss Aircraft. On March 21, 1937, Waterman's Arrowbile first flew. The Arrowbile was modified from Waterman's tailless aircraft, the WhatsitThe Arrowbile had a wingspan of 38 feet and a length of 20 feet 6 inches. It was powered by a Studebaker engine and could fly at 112 mph (180 km/h) and drive at 56 mph (90 km/h). Only five were built. In 2009 the U.S., the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) initiated the $65 million Transformer program to develop a four-person roadable aircraft by 2015. The vehicle was to have had VTOL capability and a 280-mile (450 km) range. AAI Corporation and Lockheed Martin were awarded contracts. The program was cancelled in 2013. Small numbers of flyable cars have been built since 2010. Wikipedia has list of flying cars, which it says is incomplete. There is also https://www.hotcars.com/flying-cars-that-actually-took-to-the-sky/.


I reported on iconoclastic cosmologists pursuing a cyclical theory of the universe. I believe that the most significant is Steinhardt’s theory, proposed initially by Steinhardt and Turok in 2001. It has gone through several modifications; but its basic premises are 
that two parallel planes or M-branes collide periodically in a higher-dimensional space. Our visible four-dimensional universe lies on one of these branes. The collisions correspond to a reversal from contraction to expansion, or a Big Crunch followed by a Big Bang. The matter and radiation we see today were generated during the most recent collision in a pattern dictated by quantum fluctuations created before the branes. After billions of years the universe reached the state we observe today; after billions more years it will ultimately begin to contract again. Dark energy corresponds to a force between the branes, and serves the obviates the monopolehorizon, and flatness problems, which bedeviled earlier cyclic models of the universe. You may associate branes with string theory, where a brane is a physical object that generalizes the notion of a point particle to higher dimensions


Astrophysicist Katie Mack has written a recent book, clear and intelligible and now in paperback: The End of Everything (Astrophysically Speaking) published by Scribners and aimed at intelligent lay people. It attempts to balance out the many books on the Big Bang. “in about five billion years, the sun will swell to its red giant phase, engulf the orbit of Mercury and perhaps Venus, and leave the Earth a charred, lifeless, magma-covered rock.”


She covers five current theories. There’s the Big Crunch, when the current expansion reverses and the Universe condenses into a tiny very hot dot. The most widely accepted explanation is Heat death, when everything gets too far apart and the Universe becomes dark and desolate. The Big Rip 
is a model in which the matter of the universe, from stars and galaxies to atoms and subatomic particles, and even spacetime itself, is progressively torn apart by the expansion of the universe until distances between particles will become infinite. Vacuum Decay is equally counterintuitive and seems not very likely. An explosion or something dramatic is proposed to create a bubble, a true vacuum which would gobble up or erase the universe which has no areas of true vacuum (we think). Finally we get to the alternating cyclic universe theories.



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