So much to blog, so little time

Things I would talk about at greater length and erudition if I were a man of independent means, rather than someone who supposedly works for a living. Also, today is my birthday; instructions on how to honor this auspicious occasion appear at the end of the post.

First, Henry Farrell of Crooked Timber has an eloquent article about academic blogging in this week’s Chronicle of Higher Education, “The Blogosphere as a Carnival of Ideas.” The final paragraph sums it up:

Both group blogs and the many hundreds of individual academic blogs that have been created in the last three years are pioneering something new and exciting. They’re the seeds of a collective conversation, which draws together different disciplines (sometimes through vigorous argument, sometimes through friendly interaction), which doesn’t reproduce traditional academic distinctions of privilege and rank, and which connects academic debates to a broader arena of public discussion. It’s not entirely surprising that academic blogs have provoked some fear and hostility; they represent a serious challenge to well-established patterns of behavior in the academy. Some academics view them as an unbecoming occupation for junior (and senior) scholars; in the words of Alex Halavais of the State University of New York at Buffalo, they seem “threatening to those who are established in academia, to financial interests, and to … well, decorum.” Not exactly dignified; a little undisciplined; carnivalesque. Sometimes signal, sometimes noise. But exactly because of this, they provide a kind of space for the exuberant debate of ideas, for connecting scholarship to the outside world, which we haven’t had for a long while. We should embrace them wholeheartedly.

This business about certain academics viewing blogs as an unbecoming occupation is more true that I’d like to admit (although it is far from universal). And it extends to all kinds of pretentions to public-intellectual engagement, not just our daily interventions on the internets. Which is why it’s important to emphasize that true scholarship entails two tasks, both equally crucial: discovering new things about the world, and letting people know what it is we have discovered. The first is called “research,” while the second is sufficiently undervalued that we don’t even have a good name for it. Part of it is “education,” part is “outreach,” part is engaging in public debate. But whatever you want to call it, it is just as important as research itself. You might say that, without research, there wouldn’t be anything to outreach about. True, but if we never told anyone what we had learned, there wouldn’t be any reason to do research, at least not in intellectually-driven fields like cosmology and history and literary criticism. It’s like asking whether, in baseball, the bat or the ball is more important. Without either, the whole thing becomes kind of pointless.

Next, Abhay Parekh at 3quarksdaily asks what it is that makes people disbelieve in evolution. He points the finger of blame at the “decent with random modification” part of natural selection:

My explanation is simply this: Human beings have a strong visceral reaction to disbelieve any theory which injects uncertainty or chance into their world view. They will cling to some other “explanation” of the facts which does not depend on chance until provided with absolutely incontrovertible proof to the contrary.

I’m sure that’s part of it, although I suspect the truth is a complicated mess that varies from person to person. Others chime in: Lindsay at Majikthise thinks it’s about disenchantment and an absence of meaning in purely naturalistic theories of the universe; Amanda at Pandagon chalks it up to a need to feel superior to other species; PZ at Pharyngula points to the psychological drive to be part of something bigger. I think all of these are likely part of it, and would add another ingredient to the cocktail: resentment at being told what to think by arrogant elites. When people use “local choice” as an excuse to allow school boards to decide to teach all sorts of nonsense, defenders of evolution generally treat it as simply a tactic to further their religious agenda. For the Discovery Institute et al. that is no doubt correct; but for people on the streets who are speaking at the school board meetings, I suspect a lot of it it really is about local choice. They don’t like to be told by some mutiple-degreed Ivy League east-coast intellectual types that they should think this and not that. There is a particularly American cast to this kind of resentment, which helps explain why this poor country is so much more backward about these issues than our peers in Europe.

Finally, speaking of Lindsay, she has recently embarked on quite an adventure: inspired by the experience of reporting on-location in the aftermath of Katrina, she’s quit her regular job to become a full-time stringer. But she needs some help at the early stages, so this week she’s asking for donations in turn for by-request blogging! This sort of bottom-up structure is alien to us here at Cosmic Variance, where we figure we’ll write about what we think is best and you’ll like it, or learn to. But it’s an interesting experiment. And while you have your PayPal account handy, you could drop by to Shakespeare’s Sister, who was recently hit by a double whammy when she was laid off from her job and had her property taxes increased by 100%. She’s one of the most passionate and articulate bloggers we have, and if you like what you read there, don’t be shy about dropping off a couple of bucks.

That would make me a good birthday present.

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Nobel Prize 2005

The 2005 Nobel Prize in Physics has gone to Roy J. Glauber, John L. Hall and Theodor W. Hänsch for their work on quantum optics. In particular, Glauber gets half the prize “for his contribution to the quantum theory of optical coherence,” while Hall and Hänsch split the other half “for their contributions to the development of laser-based precision spectroscopy, including the optical frequency comb technique.”

I figure it’s our duty to tell you that, although I’ll be the first to admit that I’m not an expert on quantum optics or lasers. Sounds like a worthy prize, though. In the meantime, you can become an expert yourself by playing this laser game.

Reflections

It’s hard. And that’s just classical geometric optics! Just imagine how tricky quantum optics must be.

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Miers nominated

Bush nominates White House counsel Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court. Now, I don’t know anything about her, perhaps she’ll end up being a excellent Justice. But it boggles the mind — buffeted by accusations of cronyism and unqualified appointees, Bush needs to choose a Supreme Court Justice and nominates his own lawyer from his days in Texas. As David Bernstein says at the Volokh Conspiracy (no left-wing rag, trust me), the agenda seems pretty clear:

What do Miers and Roberts have in common? They both have significant executive branch experience, and both seem more likely than other potential candidates to uphold the Administration on issues related to the War on Terror (e.g., Padilla and whether a citizen arrested in the U.S. can be tried in military court). Conservative political activists want someone who will interpret the Constitution in line with conservative judicial principles. But just as FDR’s primary goal in appointing Justices was to appoint Justices that would uphold the centerpiece of his presidency, the New Deal, which coincidentally resulted in his appointing individuals who were liberal on other things, perhaps Bush sees his legacy primarily in terms of the War on Terror, and appointing Justices who will acquiesce in exercises of executive authority is his priority, even if it isn’t the priority of either his base or the nation as a whole.

The conservatives at ConfirmThem are also pissed. People of every ideological stripe are united in the conviction that they would prefer someone with some strong convictions (preferably their own), beyond simply loyalty to the President. See, he is a uniter!

Update: Ezra Klein links to what David Frum (of all people) has to say about Miers:

I believe I was the first to float the name of Harriet Miers, White House counsel, as a possible Supreme Court. Today her name is all over the news. I have to confess that at the time, I was mostly joking. Harriet Miers is a capable lawyer, a hard worker, and a kind and generous person. She would be an reasonable choice for a generalist attorney, which is indeed how George W. Bush first met her. She would make an excellent trial judge: She is a careful and fair-minded listener. But US Supreme Court?

In the White House that hero worshipped the president, Miers was distinguished by the intensity of her zeal: She once told me that the president was the most brilliant man she had ever met. She served Bush well, but she is not the person to lead the court in new directions – or to stand up under the criticism that a conservative justice must expect.

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Does the Earth move around the Sun?

In the comments to Mark’s post about the embarassment being caused to the U.S. by the creationism trial in Dover, a scuffle has broken out over another deep question: does the Earth go around the Sun? See here and here and here.

It’s actually a more subtle question than you might think. The question is not “Was Ptolemy right after all?”, but rather “in the context of modern theories of spacetime, is it even sensible to say `X goes around Y,’ or is that kind of statement necessarily dependent on an (ultimately arbitrary) choice of coordinate system?”

You’ve come to the right place for this one; biologists can have their fun demolishing creationism, but we’re the experts on the whole geocentrism/heliocentrism thing. The answer, of course, does indeed depend on what one means by “move around,” and in particular the comments refer to the notion of a “reference frame.” I can think of at least three different things one might mean by that phrase. First there is the idea of a “global reference frame.” By this we mean, set up some perpendicular axes (some choice of coordinates x, y, and z) locally, right there in the room where you are sitting. Now extend these coordinates globally throughout space, by following straight lines and keeping everything appropriately perpendicular. That would be a global reference frame. (I am implicitly assuming that the coordinates are “Cartesian,” rather than using polar coordinates or some such thing — no reason to contemplate that particular complication.)

The second notion is that of an “inertial reference frame.” Inertial frames are actually a subset of all possible global frames; in particular, they are the global frames in which free (unaccelerated) particles appear to move on straight lines. Basically, this simply means that we allow the coordinate axes to float freely, as would gyroscopes in free-fall, rather than rotating them around. Newton figured out long ago that we could decide whether we were in an inertial frame or not by examining whether the water in a bucket that was stationary with respect to our frame began to creep up the sides (as it would if our bucket were rotating with respect to a really inertial frame).

Finally, we have the more flexible notion of a “coordinate system.” Unlike a global frame or the even-more-restrictive inertial frame, a coordinate system can be set down throughout space in any old way, so long as it assigns unique coordinates to each point. No mention is made of extending things along straight lines or keeping angles perpendicular; just put down your coordinates like a drunken sailor and be done with it.

Now what does all this pedantic geometry have to do with the Earth going around the Sun? Well, what Copernicus was really saying was that there is no inertial reference frame in which the Earth is stationary at the center and the Sun moves in a circle around it. Of course we could still imagine some global frame with the Earth stationary at the center; in fact, such geocentric reference frames are often quite useful. But it wouldn’t be inertial, as we could easily tell by the existence of Coriolis forces (as measured for example by Foucault’s pendulum). That is the sense in which it’s “really” the Earth that goes around the Sun, not vice-versa.

But now comes along Einstein and general relativity (GR). What’s the situation there? It actually cuts both ways. Most importantly, in GR the concept of a global reference frame and the more restrictive concept of an inertial frame simply do not exist. You cannot take your locally-defined axes and stretch them uniquely throughout space, there’s just no way to do it. (In particular, if you tried, you would find that the coordinates defined by traveling along two different paths gave you two different values for the same point in space.) Instead, all we have are coordinate systems of various types. Even in Newtonian absolute space (or for that matter in special relativity, which in this matter is just the same as Newtonian mechanics) we always have the freedom to choose elaborate coordinate systems, but in GR that’s all we have. And if we can choose all sorts of different coordinates, there is nothing to stop us from choosing one with the Earth at the center and the Sun moving around in circles (or ellipses) around it. It would be kind of perverse, but it is no less “natural” than anything else, since there is no notion of a globally inertial coordinate system that is somehow more natural. That is the sense in which, in GR, it is equally true to say that the Sun moves around the Earth as vice-versa.

On the other hand, sometimes one is able to make useful approximations, and there’s no reason to forget that. In particular, gravity in the Solar System is extremely well described as “flat spacetime (as in special relativity) plus a small perturbation.” From this perspective, we can very well define inertial frames in the flat background spacetime on top of which gravity is a tiny perturbation. And in those frames, it’s the Sun that is basically stationary and the Earth that is truly moving. So even the most highly sensitive general-relativists would not complain if you said that the Earth moved around the Sun, unless they hadn’t yet had their coffee that morning and were feeling especially confrontational.

Tune in tomorrow for a detailed examination of “what goes up, must come down.”

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That famous equation

Brian Greene has an article in the New York Times about Einstein’s famous equation E=mc2. The relation between mass and energy was really an afterthought, and isn’t as important to physics as what we now call “Einstein’s equation” — Rμν – (1/2)Rgμν = 8πGTμν, the relation between spacetime curvature and stress-energy. But it’s a good equation, and has certainly captured the popular imagination.

One way of reading E=mc2 is “what we call the `mass’ of an object is the value of its energy when it’s just sitting there motionless.” The factor of the speed of light squared is a reflection of the unification of space and time in relativity. What we think of as space and time are really two aspects of a single four-dimensional spacetime, but measuring intervals in spacetime requires different procedures depending on whether the interval is “mostly space” or “mostly time.” In the former case we use meter sticks, in the latter we use clocks. The speed of light is the conversion factor between the two types of measurement. (Of course professionals usually imagine clocks that tick off in years and measuring rods that are ruled in light-years, so that we have nice units where c=1.)

Greene makes the important point that E=mc2 isn’t just about nuclear energy; it’s about all sorts of energy, including when you burn gas in your car. At Crooked Timber, John Quiggin was wondering about that, since (like countless others) he was taught that only nuclear reactions are actually converting mass into energy; chemical reactions are a different kind of beast.

Greene is right, of course, but it does get taught badly all the time. The confusion stems from what you mean by “mass.” After Einstein’s insight, we understand that mass isn’t a once-and-for-all quantity that characterizes an object like an electron or an atom; the mass is simply the rest-energy of the body, and can be altered by changing the internal energies of the system. In other words, the mass is what you measure when you put the thing on a scale (given the gravitational field, so you can convert between mass and weight).

In particular, if you take some distinct particles with well-defined masses, and combine them together into a bound system, the mass of the resulting system will be the sums of the masses of the constituents plus the binding energy of the system (which is often negative, so the resulting mass is lower). This is exactly what is going on in nuclear reactions: in fission processes, you are taking a big nucleus and separating it into two smaller nuclei with a lower (more negative) binding energy, decreasing the total mass and releasing the extra energy as heat. Or, in fusion, taking two small nuclei and combining them into a larger nucleus with a lower binding energy. In either case, if you measured the masses of the individual particles before and after, it would have decreased by the amount of energy released (times c2).

But it is also precisely what happens in chemical reactions; you can, for example, take two hydrogen atoms and an oxygen atom and combine them into a water molecule, releasing some energy in the process. As commenter abb1 notes over at CT, this indeed means that the mass of a water molecule is less than the combined mass of two hydrogen atoms and an oxygen atom. The difference in mass is too tiny to typically measure, but it’s absolutely there. The lesson of relativity is that “mass” is one form energy can take, just like “binding energy” is, and we can convert between them no sweat.

So E=mc2 is indeed everywhere, running your computer and your car just as much as nuclear reactors. Of course, the first ancient tribe to harness fire didn’t need to know about E=mc2 in order to use this new technology to keep them warm; but the nice thing about the laws of physics is that they keep on working whether we understand them or not.

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Faculty blogging

There are a lot of good science bloggers out there, but overall we are way behind other areas of academia in the realm of scholarly blogging. Social scientists and law professors, in particular — that is, disciplines that regularly interact strongly with the larger social context — seem to have taken to blogging more readily, including at least one Nobel laureate (economist Gary Becker).

Here’s what looks like a major step: a new blog by the faculty of the University of Chicago Law School.

The University of Chicago School of Law has always been a place about ideas. We love talking about them, writing about them, and refining them through open, often lively conversation. This blog is just a natural extension of that tradition. Our hope is to use the blog as a forum in which to exchange nascent ideas with each other and also a wider audience, and to hear feedback about which ideas are compelling and which could use some re-tooling.

The entire faculty! Taking turns blogging, discussing recondite legal issues within an informal format that is readily accessible to interested nonexperts. Jack Balkin has a good take on the project; it will be interesting to see how it develops.

Perhaps, after cautiously observing the experience of their colleagues across campus, more scientists will come to appreciate the fact that they are paid not only to discover new things about the world, but to communicate to others what it is that they’ve discovered.

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Doomsday clock

It’s the 60th anniversary of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, which premiered in December, 1945, just a few months after atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The goal of the magazine has always been simple, if somewhat ambitious: to save the world by working to minimize the threat of nuclear war. It came out of a time when physicists were central players in questions of international security.

Doomsday ClockThe most famous product of the Bulletin is of course the Doomsday Clock, an iconic image that is far more famous than the magazine itself. The minute hand on the clock moves in response to the perceived danger of imminent global disaster. It’s fascinating to peek back at the timeline for the evolution of the clock, as it bounces back and forth in response to world events.

  • 1947: Seven minutes to midnight. Chosen mostly for artistic reasons, apparently. The original conception didn’t include the idea that the clock would actually move to reflect developments in international security.
  • 1949: Three minutes to midnight. The Soviet Union explodes its first atomic bomb.
  • 1953: Two minutes to midnight. The US and USSR explode hydrogen bombs.
  • 1960: Seven minutes to midnight. International cooperation to check the growth of nuclear weapons grows.
  • 1963: Twelve minutes to midnight. The US and USSR sign the Partial Test Ban Treaty, the first international arms-control agreement. (For some reason, the Cuban Missile Crisis doesn’t seem to have really registered — possibly it came and went too quickly.)
  • 1968: Seven minutes to midnight. France and China acquire nuclear weapons; arms stockpiles increase while development aid to developing nations languishes.
  • 1969: Ten minutes to midnight. The US Senate ratifies the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
  • 1972: Twelve minutes to midnight. The US and USSR sign the first Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT I).
  • 1974: Nine minutes to midnight. Arms control talks stall; India develops a nuclear weapon.
  • 1980: Seven minutes to midnight. Small wars and terrorist activities grow, while arms-control talks remain stuck.
  • 1981: Four minutes to midnight. Terrorism and repression of human rights grows, along with conflicts in multiple theaters around the world.
  • 1984: Three minutes to midnight. Arms race picks up steam.
  • 1988: Six minutes to midnight. The US and USSR sign a treaty limiting intermediate-range nuclear weapons.
  • 1990: Ten minutes to midnight. Democracy flourishes in Eastern Europe; Cold War ends!
  • 1991: Seventeen minutes to midnight. The clock leaps dramatically backward as the Cold War remains over, and the US and USSR announce signficant cuts in nuclear stockpiles.
  • 1995: Fourteen minutes to midnight. Turns out that the peace dividend wasn’t quite what it might have been, as arms spending continues at Cold War levels. Fear grows of proliferation of nuclear weapons from poorly-controled facilities in the former Soviet Union.
  • 1998: Nine minutes to midnight. India and Pakistan go public with nuclear weapons.
  • 2002: Seven minutes to midnight. The U.S. rejects a series of arms control treaties and announces its withdrawal from the ABM treaty. Significant concerns about proliferation of nuclear weapons to terrorists.

So we’re right back where we started. If you don’t agree with the positioning of the clock as decided upon by the Bulletin’s board, you can always consult the Rapture Index for an alternative take on the imminence of Armageddon.

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Power women

I don’t know about my co-bloggers, but reality has intruded and there hasn’t been much time for blogging this week. Instead, here is a photo of Angelina Jolie, Condoleezza Rice, and Hillary Clinton.
angelina, condoleezza, hillary
They were each speaking at a dinner for the Global Business Coalition on HIV-AIDS. If the Washington Post is to be believed, Hillary had the best line:

“It’s hard being a beautiful celebrity,” Clinton said. “I wouldn’t know, but I’ve got to imagine it has to be very difficult.”

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Science reporting as it should be

As PZ and Chris Mooney point out, we finally see an article about evolution and creationism that gets it right — by making it clear from the outset that evolutionary theory is well-established science and supported by mountains of evidence.

When scientists announced last month they had determined the exact order of all 3 billion bits of genetic code that go into making a chimpanzee, it was no surprise that the sequence was more than 96 percent identical to the human genome. Charles Darwin had deduced more than a century ago that chimps were among humans’ closest cousins.

But decoding chimpanzees’ DNA allowed scientists to do more than just refine their estimates of how similar humans and chimps are. It let them put the very theory of evolution to some tough new tests.

If Darwin was right, for example, then scientists should be able to perform a neat trick. Using a mathematical formula that emerges from evolutionary theory, they should be able to predict the number of harmful mutations in chimpanzee DNA by knowing the number of mutations in a different species’ DNA and the two animals’ population sizes.

“That’s a very specific prediction,” said Eric Lander, a geneticist at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard in Cambridge, Mass., and a leader in the chimp project.

Sure enough, when Lander and his colleagues tallied the harmful mutations in the chimp genome, the number fit perfectly into the range that evolutionary theory had predicted.

Their analysis was just the latest of many in such disparate fields as genetics, biochemistry, geology and paleontology that in recent years have added new credence to the central tenet of evolutionary theory: That a smidgeon of cells 3.5 billion years ago could — through mechanisms no more extraordinary than random mutation and natural selection — give rise to the astonishing tapestry of biological diversity that today thrives on Earth.

Evolution’s repeated power to predict the unexpected goes a long way toward explaining why so many scientists and others are practically apoplectic over the recent decision by a Pennsylvania school board to treat evolution as an unproven hypothesis, on par with “alternative” explanations such as Intelligent Design (ID), the proposition that life as we know it could not have arisen without the helping hand of some mysterious intelligent force.

Kudos to Rick Weiss and David Brown of the Washington Post. And to everyone else: see, it’s not that hard!

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Life in the Solar System

Bitch Ph.D. is temporarily away, but loyal spouse Mr. B. has taken control and turned the site into — a science blog! Today he’s talking about the interesting issue of contaminating other planets with organisms from Earth.

Nowadays, when we send out space probes, we sterilize them. What little I know of this seems to indicate that our sterilization processes may be far from perfect. Regardless, the rationale for sterilization is sound — whether or not life exists or has existed at the probe’s destination, sending some of Earth’s life to the destination would potentially muck things up beyond repair. When we fear a spacecraft might not be sterile, we purposefully destroy it while it still has fuel enough to perform a fatal maneuver, as we did with the Galileo probe to protect the potential life on Jupiter’s moon Europa from earthy microbes possibly riding on the probe. These are real concerns that govern our use of current robotic space probes.

Suppose we didn’t worry about such things. Suppose there is life, an ecosystem, where we send a space probe. Suppose further, that some hardy bacteria or fungus stowed away on the space probe and is thereby introduced into the alien ecosystem. Chances are it will die out. However, there’s a slim chance that such stowaways could find habitat, potentially altering or even destroying an existing alien ecosystem.

I suspect it’s pretty unlikely that we will ever find anything worth of the name “life” on Mars or elsewhere in the Solar System, but I’m certainly no expert. If we did find anything, of course, it would be incredibly important, so I am happy to keep an open mind. (On the other hand, given the small chances, I agree with a colleague who says “It’s more important to look for supersymmetry than for life on Mars.”)

Still, one of the absolutely fascinating recent advances in the study of life’s origin has been the possible role of extraterrestrial chemistry. The classic Miller-Urey experiment demonstrated the possibility of creating amino acids by shooting sparks into a chamber designed to mimic the atmosphere of the young Earth. But apparently there’s good reason to believe that the Earth’s atmosphere wasn’t really like that in the experiment; in particular, it had more oxygen and less reducing compounds, and nobody has been able to make amino acids by zapping an atmosphere of that type.

On the other hand, conditions for synthesis of amino acids may exist in space! Interstellar clouds appear to be good places to create prebiotic organic compounds, or even proto-cells. It’s perfectly plausible that these could have been brought to Earth early on by crashing comets and meteorites. If so, it’s clear that the other planets would have received similar interplanetary donations of organic materials; no reason to believe that they necessarily evolved into life, but a fascinating possibility nevertheless.

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