“This is like Deja Vu all over again” - Yogi Berra

13 12 2006

deja_vu.jpg

“Cosmos magazine is reporting that even the blind experience deja vu — backing the idea that it is caused by misfires in the brain’s temporal lobe. They quote a British study where a blind man feels like he has ‘already seen’ some unfamiliar situations. ‘Hearing and touch and smell often seem to intermingle in the déjà vu experiences,’ said the study subject, whose name has not been made public. ‘It is almost like photographic memory, without sight obviously… as if I was encountering a mini-recording in my head, but trying to think “Where have I come across that before?”

Déjà vu, French for ‘already seen’, is the illusionary feeling that one has previously witnessed or experienced a new situation, and has been reported to occur in up to 96 per cent of the population.





Perspective

12 12 2006

sun-prespective1.jpg

Fact: Sunspot 930 on the sun right now is three times as wide as the earth. This picture of the sun was taken today from the SOHO satellite and I superimposed the Earth to give you an idea of its size. Last week sunspot 930 erupted with a massive Solar Flare and Coronal Mass Ejection which disrupted some satellite communications. This came during a time when the sun is “supposed” to be relatively quiet.

Read the rest of this entry »





The Doomsday Bomb: Bacteria or Nuclear?

10 12 2006

Penicillin in WW2

I’ve been thinking a lot about bacteria lately.

With a stepdaughter in the hospital with a limb threatening Staph infection, and the latest E.Coli outbreak from scallions in Taco Bell, its become abundantly clear that we are under attack.

Read the rest of this entry »





Escherichia coli

8 12 2006

ecoli.jpg

The latest food poisoning of E.Coli makes one wonder: Just how safe is our food supply? Are the increased frequency of incidents an indicator of sloppy food handling, processing, and transport, or are we seeing the work of some group or entity testing our ability to detect pathogens in our food supply?

Contaminating foods with E. Coli is extraordinarily easy. Just culture it in an easily made bilogical medium known as Agar. Agar is typically sold as packaged strips of washed and dried seaweed, or in powdered form. Combine the E Coli culture with liquid, and spray a field with a hand pump, or toss a jar of it onto a bin of it during harvesting or processing.

The culprit here is a speciifc strain of Escherichia coli (usually abbreviated to E. coli, coli is Latin for “of the colon”) discovered by Theodor Escherich, a German pediatrician and bacteriologist, is one of the main species of bacteria that live in the lower intestines of mammals, known as gut flora. Specimens have also been located on the edge of hot springs. Presence in surface water is a common indicator of fecal contamination. It belongs among the Enterobacteriaceae, and is commonly used as a model organism for bacteria in general. One of the root words of the family’s scientific name, “enteric”, refers to the intestine, and is often used synonymously with “fecal”.

The number of individual E. coli bacteria in the feces that a human excretes in one day averages between 100 billion and 10 trillion. All the different kinds of fecal coli bacteria, and all the very similar bacteria that live in the ground (in soil or decaying plants, of which the most common is Enterobacter aerogenes), are grouped together under the name coliform bacteria.

E.coli O157:H7 is the strain that cuases illness in humans and can be fatal, as has been the case this week with scallions served in food at Taco Bell Restaurants.

Escherichia coli O157:H7 is a leading cause of foodborne illness. Based on a 1999 estimate, 73,000 cases of infection and 61 deaths occur in the United States each year. In the ten CDC Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network (FoodNet) sites (which represent 15% of the US population), there was a 29% decline in E. coli O157:H7 infection since 1996-98.

Infection with E. coli often leads to bloody diarrhea, and occasionally to kidney failure. People can become infected with E.coli O157:H7 in a variety of ways. Though most illness has been associated with eating undercooked, contaminated ground beef, people have also become ill from eating contaminated bean sprouts or fresh leafy vegetables such as lettuce and spinach. Person-to-person contact in families and child care centers is also a known mode of transmission. In addition, infection can occur after drinking raw milk and after swimming in or drinking sewage-contaminated water.

Consumers can prevent E. coli O157:H7 infection by thoroughly cooking ground beef, avoiding unpasteurized milk, and by washing hands carefully before preparing or eating food. Fruits and vegetables should be washed well, but washing may not remove all contamination. Public service announcements on television, radio, or in the newspapers will advise you which foods to avoid in the event of an outbreak.

Surprisingly, a common household spice, cinnamon, seems to kill this strain of E.Coli. When cinnamon is in, Escherichia coli O157:H7 is out. That’s what researchers at Kansas State University discovered in laboratory tests with cinnamon and apple juice heavily tainted with the bacteria. Presented at the Institute of Food Technologists’ 1999 Annual Meeting in Chicago on July 27, the study findings revealed that cinnamon is a lethal weapon against E. coli O157:H7 and may be able to help control it in unpasteurized juices.

Lead researcher Erdogan Ceylan, M.S., reported that in apple juice samples inoculated with about one million E. coli O157:H7 bacteria, about one teaspoon (0.3 percent) of cinnamon killed 99.5 percent of the bacteria in three days at room temperature (25 C). When the same amount of cinnamon was combined with either 0.1 percent sodium benzoate or potassium sorbate, preservatives approved by the Food and Drug Administration, the E. coli were knocked out to an undetectable level.

Let’s hope the active agent in cinnamon can be isolated and put twoards protecting our food supply.

In the meatime here is some information from the Center for Disiease Control

How is E. coli O157:H7 infection diagnosed?
Infection with E. coli O157:H7 is diagnosed by detecting the bacterium in the stool. About one-third of laboratories that culture stool still do not test for E. coli O157:H7, so it is important to request that the stool specimen be tested on sorbitol-MacConkey (SMAC) agar for this organism. All persons who suddenly have diarrhea with blood should get their stool tested for E. coli O157:H7.

How is the illness treated?
Most people recover without antibiotics or other specific treatment within 5 to 10 days. Antibiotics should not be used to treat this infection. There is no evidence that antibiotics improve the course of disease, and it is thought that treatment with some antibiotics could lead to kidney complications. Antidiarrheal agents, such as loperamide (Imodium®), should also be avoided.

In some people, E. coli O157:H7 infection can cause a complication called hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), a life-threatening condition that is usually treated in an intensive care unit. Blood transfusions and kidney dialysis are often required. With intensive care, the death rate for hemolytic uremic syndrome is 3%-5%.

What are the long-term consequences of infection?
Persons who only have diarrhea usually recover completely.

A small proportion of persons with hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) have immediate complications with lifelong implications, such as blindness, paralysis, persistent kidney failure, and the effects of having part of their bowel removed. Many persons with hemolytic uremic syndrome have mild abnormalities in kidney function many years later.





Yottawatts

8 12 2006

meter_reading.jpg

Ok the first thing that went through my mind when I saw the word Yottawatts was that episode of Seinfeld where Elaine uses the phrase…yadda, yadda, yadda…

But its actually about powers of ten and electrical power (watts). I was researching the amount of solar insolation the earth receives from the sun (174 Petawatts) and ran across this page in WikiPedia full of variations on my namesake.

By the way, Petawatts has nothing to do with my disdain for the sometimes crazy tactics of the animal rights group.

So have a few watts on me:

Yoctowatt (10-24 watt)

Zeptowatt (10-21 watt)

Attowatt (10-18 watt)

Femtowatt (10-15 watt)

  • 2.5 fW - Tech: minimum discernible signal at the antenna terminal
    of a good FM radio
    receiver

  • 10 fW (-110 dBm) - Tech: approximate lower limit of power reception
    on digital spread-spectrum cell phones

Picowatt (10-12 watt)

  • 1 pW - BioMed: average power consumption of a human cell
  • 2.5 pW - BioMed: Sound intensity per square centimeter for average
    human threshold of hearing at 1000 Hz; 1 phon
    or 0 dB SPL

  • 150 pW - BioMed: Power entering a human eye from a 100 watt lamp 1
    km away

Nanowatt (10-9 watt)

  • 2-15nW - Tech: Power consumption of some PIC Microcontroller chips
    such as the PIC12F683 when in "sleep" mode. (actual consumption
    when sleeping depends on voltage supply used, see data sheet, Electrical
    Characteristics section).

Microwatt (10-6 watt)

Milliwatt (10-3 watt)

  • 5 mW - Tech: laser in a CD-ROM
    drive

  • 5-10 mW - Tech: laser in a DVD
    player

  • 100 mW - Tech: laser in a CD-R
    drive

Watt

1 Watt = 1 amp x
1 volt of electrical power

  • 5 W - Legal: maximum power output of a CB
    or hand-held radio transmitter

  • 20-40 W - BioMed: approximate power consumption of the human brain
  • 30-40 W - Tech: the power of the typical household tube light
  • 60 W - Tech: the power of the typical household light
    bulb

  • 82 W - Tech: peak power consumption of Pentium
    4
    CPU

  • 100 W - BioMed: approximate average power used by the human
    body

  • 120 W - Tech: power output of 1 m2 solar
    panel
    in full sunlight

  • 253 W (2,215 kWh/year)
    - Geo: per capita average power use of the world in 2001

  • 290 W - Units: approximately 1000 BTU/hour
  • 300-400 W - Tech: typical PC
    power supply

  • 400 W - Tech: legal limit of power output of an amateur
    radio
    station in the United
    Kingdom

  • 500 W - BioMed: power output of a person working hard physically
  • 745.7 W - Units: 1 horsepower
  • 750 W - Astro: the amount of sunshine falling on a square metre of
    the Earth’s surface on a clear day

  • 900 W - BioMed: power output of a healthy human (non-athlete)
    averaged over the first 6s of a 30s cycle sprint. [1]

Kilowatt (103 watt)

  • 1.366 kW - Astro: power received from the Sun
    at the Earth’s
    orbit by one
    square metre

  • 1.39 kW (12.2 MWh/year) - Geo: per capita average power use in the U.S.
    in 2003

  • 1.5 kW - Tech: legal limit of power output of an amateur
    radio
    station in the United
    States

  • up to 2 kW - BioMed: approximate short time power output of
    sprinting professional cyclists

  • 1 kW to 2 kW - Tech: heat output of a domestic electric kettle.
  • 3.3-6.6 kW - Eco: average photosynthetic
    power output per square
    kilometer
    of ocean
    [2]

  • 30 kW - power generated by the four motors of GEN H-4 one man helicopter
  • 16-32 kW - Eco: average photosynthetic power output per square
    kilometer of land
    [3]

  • 50 kW to 100 kW - Tech: ERP
    of clear
    channel
    AM

  • 40 kW to 200 kW - Tech: approximate range of power output of
    typical automobiles

  • 167 kW - Tech: power consumption of UNIVAC
    1
    computer

  • 250 kW - Tech: highest allowed ERP
    for an FM
    band
    radio
    station
    in the United
    States
    .

  • 250 kW to 800 kW - Tech: approximate range of power output of ‘Supercars

Megawatt
(106 watt)

The productive capacity of electrical generators operated by utility
companies is often measured in MW. Few things can sustain the transfer or
consumption of energy on this scale; some of these events or entities include:
lightning strikes, naval craft (such as aircraft
carriers
and submarines),
engineering hardware, and some scientific research equipment (such as the supercollider
and large lasers).

For reference, about 10,000 100-watt lightbulbs or 5,000 computer systems
would be needed to draw 1 megawatt. Also, 1 MW equals approximately 1341 horsepower.
Modern high-powered diesel-electric
railroad locomotives
typically have a peak power output of 3–5 MW, whereas a typical modern nuclear
power plant
produces on the order of 500–2000 MW peak output.

Gigawatt (109 watt)

Terawatt (1012 watt)

  • 1.7 TW - Geo: average electrical power consumption of the world in 2001
  • 3.327 TW - Geo: average total (gas, electricity, etc) power
    consumption of the U.S.
    in 2001

  • 13.5 TW - Geo: average total power consumption of the human world
    in 2001

  • 44 TW - Geo: average total heat flux from earth’s interior (See
    figure in http://physicsweb.org/articles/news/9/7/16/1)

  • 75 TW - Eco: based on global net
    primary production
    (= biomass
    production) via photosynthesis

  • 50 to 200 TW - Weather: rate of heat energy release by a hurricane
  • In "Star Trek: The Next Generation", the warp core of the
    fictitious Enterprise-D was able to produce a maximum power output into the
    Terawatt range.

Petawatt (1015 watt)

Exawatt (1018 watt)

  • 1 EW - Astro: Approximate power generated between the surfaces of
    Jupiter and its moon Io due to Jupiter’s tremendous magnetic field.

Zettawatt (1021 watt)

Yottawatt (1024 watt)

  • 5.3 YW - Tech: Power produced by the Tsar
    Bomba
    fusion bomb, the most powerful device ever made

  • 386 YW - Astro: Luminosity
    of the Sun

Greater than Yottawatt





New satellite service captures Mt. Etna in action

7 12 2006

etna.jpg

This Envisat MERIS image acquired on 25 November 2006 captures smoke spewing from Europe’s largest active volcano, Mt. Etna. The 3 350 metre-high volcano resumed eruptions in early September this year and entered its highly active phase on 5 November, according to the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanic Studies.

For a very cool large image see this: http://esamultimedia.esa.int/images/EarthObservation/images_of_the_week/MER_FR__0PNPDE20061125_H.jpg

The European Space Agency (ESA) is putting recent pictures of the Earth (taken 2 hours before) online using Envisat. To avoid filling up their server hard disks too quickly, only the bmp of the last 30 days are available but jpg are kept.

To try out this unique service visit http://earth.esa.int/earthimages/





Solar Cells hit 40%!!!

6 12 2006

silicon solar cells

Solar power has held out a promise of energy independence for a very long time. Unfortunately, its taken a very long time to become a significant part of the energy production in the US. California leads the way with solar power, thanks to rebates and tax initiatives.

I was fortunate enough to be able to take advantage of that in putting solar power on my own home and as Trustee for Chico Unified School District, I spearheaded their first ever solar power installation
at Little Chico Creek Elementary School which you can see online here

The panels used for both of those projects had solar to electricity conversion efficiencies of about 14-15%, which is normal for today’s silicon solar cells. So its with some real excitement that I found on the U.S. Department of Energy website news of a real breakthrough in solar energy efficiency

From the article: "…with DOE funding, a concentrator solar cell produced by Boeing-Spectrolab has recently achieved a world-record conversion efficiency of 40.7 percent, establishing a new milestone in sunlight-to-electricity performance." Ever since solar cells were invented to power satellites for the space program, improving conversion efficiency has been a slow process as you can see in the graph below.

history of solar cell efficiencies

Now here’s where it gets really interesting.

A page linked from Wikipedia’s article on solar energy calculates the land area that would need to be covered by solar collectors at 8% efficiency to meet the world’s energy needs (18 Terawatts using 2003 figures). At this new 40% efficiency, it looks like a square 265 square miles American southwest would be enough to supply the
entire world energy needs. Just supplying the USA would take about 25% of that land area. It’s possible. It’s within our reach.

The big question is: will it be cost effective to produce this new type of solar cell?

Right now, off the shelf silicon solar panels are still so expensive that rebate and incentive programs are needed to make it cost effective. Let’s hope that congress will take our presidents call for oil independence seriously enough to put some funding behind this new discovery.





Online Anonymity - your 10 minutes of flame

5 12 2006

anonymity.jpg

One of the downsides in dealing with blogs is that sometimes people like to take potshots but won’t give their name, or they use a “handle” like NorcalBlogs infamous “Tasker”.

Sometimes even the ER print edition gets nailed by it. For example, during the Jeff Sloan affair, editor David Little accidentally published a couple of letters to the editor critical of the CUSD Board of Trustees that were emailed in that appeared valid, but were actually sent by a bogus author. Of course I can’t work up a whole lot of sympathy for that problem since the ER encourages a daily excercise in opinion without responsibility known as “Tell it to the ER”. What most people don’t realize is that email is traceable, leaving IP signatures that can even be traced down to the exact DSL or cable modem used to send the email, the type of PC or Mac computer used, and the email program used to author and send it.

Thats about to change.

So, its with some trepidation that I announce a new “10 minute email” service for all those anonymous cowards out there who like to fling opinion without having any responsibility for it. But I figure you’ll find out soon enough anyway, so I may as well make others aware of it so they can learn to deal with it.

It is called 10MinuteMail and you can see it at www.10MinuteMail.com

It gives you a temporary e-mail address, and lets you receive and reply to e-mail sent to that address. The e-mail address expires in 10 minutes (or more, you can extend it as you need more time). Basically it provides an easy way to avoid giving your real e-mail address to Web sites which require an e-mail from you to sign up. You could think of it as spam avoidance or “drive by email”.

I’m sure the cloak-and-dagger crowd will have fun conjuring up all manner of nefarious uses for such a transient communications tool. Drive by opinion just got easier I guess, but I suppose its up to editors and bloggers to ensure that posters have valid email addresses before they publish controversial work.

Now if we can just make SPAM expire in 10 minutes, we’ll really have something.





Long Night’s Moon

4 12 2006

FullMoon.jpg

According to folklore, tonight’s full moon is the Long Nights Moon. It gets its name from the long nights of December, when the full moon is closest to the Winter Solstice. It is also sometimes called the Moon before Yule. There’s also something special about the Long Nights Moon: it travels extra-high in the sky, passing almost directly overhead at midnight. Go outside and take a look.





Open the garage bay door, HAL

3 12 2006

garage-door.jpg

There’s a Chicago Tribune article reporting that in Colorado the Air Force is jamming garage doors. In a joint U.S.-Canadian operation, they were testing communications on a frequency that would be used by first responders in the event of a threat to homeland security. The 21st Space Command based in Cheyenne Mountain is conducting the tests.

From the article:
“But the frequency also controls an estimated 50 million garage door openers, and hundreds of residents in the area found that theirs had suddenly stopped working… Technically, the Air Force has the right to the frequency, which it began using nearly three years ago at some bases. Signals have previously interfered with garage doors near bases in Florida, Maryland, and Pennsylvania.”

I’ve always believed that eventually, somebody (maybe TV sitcom Home Improvement’s Tim Allen) would put a garage door opener in orbit, and have it cycle through every code. It’s the ultimate geek prank. In this case, the stronger Air Force transmitter signal is “swamping” the garage door receivers so that they can’t hear the weaker signal from the remotes, just like local radio stations drown out distant ones, but when they go off-air you can hear the distant stations.