Wednesday, 23 December 2009
The curious incident
Musing about his love for prime numbers, he says "Prime numbers are what is left when you have taken all the patterns away. I think prime numbers are like life. They are very logical but you could never work out the rules, even if you spent all your time thinking about them."
Later he discusses Occam's razor. This is a philosophical concept from several centuries ago. It states that you should always go for the simplest possible explanation of the evidence. Overcomplicated explanations are far less likely to be true. An example is what they did with the observed movement of the Sun. Yes, it looks as though it goes round the Earth, but that would mean that the planets would have to perform little spirals and loops in their orbits. Far simpler to have the Earth and all the planets going round the Sun.
Ican't recommend the book highly enough! It's brilliant. (parental advisory: lots of strong language when he reports what his parents and other adults say.)
Monday, 21 December 2009
The shortest day
It was put to me that this is why the mornings seem darker in January, but it's over by then anyway. And you'd be struggling to notice the effect against variations in weather due to cloud cover.
Friday, 18 December 2009
Revision blogs
The Upper Sixth will find similar at http://www.brockostressline.blogspot.com/
In both cases, you'll have to ratch around to find the stuff that applies to the topics that we have done this term.
Solar panels
Thursday, 10 December 2009
A controversial book
At present, I am with the consensus blaming humans for global warming at the moment. But I've always believed that science is like a court case. You should listen to arguments from both sides and decide on the basis of the evidence. Hence it's always possible that new evidence might make me rethink my position. I'll let you know how the book goes.
Tuesday, 8 December 2009
Alan Guth Lecture
Alan Guth has done this year's Isaac Newton lecture for the Institute of Physics. They have put the lecture up on the internet. I haven't had time to watch it yet, so of course it might boring but there's only one way to find out:
http://www.iop.org/activity/awards/International%20Award/newton09/page_37514.html
Tuesday, 1 December 2009
Lorn!
Logarithms (ordinary Log on a calculator) are a great way of working out how to express any number to the power of 10. I'm not fond of the number 3. To avoid using it, I can do Log3, which is 0.477. So instead of saying 3, I can just say "10 to the power 0.477" instead, because they mean the same thing.
Natural logarithms are based on the number "e", which is another fantastic irrational number like pi. It helps you to work out a way to write any number as a power of e. We use it a lot in physics to analyse exponential decay in radioactivity and in capacitors. It helps us turn curved graphs into straight lines. (Now Ln3 = 1.099, so I could avoid saying 3 by calling it "e to the power 1.099" instead.)
Monday, 30 November 2009
Solar panels - at last, some data!
I wonder how much they cost to install?
The low power rating also raises questions, because 0.13kW would only run light bulbs or TV sets - things that aren't designed to produce heat. However, if the panels just add to the total electricity coming into the house, meaning that less is taken from the grid, then perhaps they will provide an interesting alternative.
Friday, 27 November 2009
Wigton church stained glass
Tomorrow Melvyn Bragg is doing a talk about the new stained glass windows that he commissioned for St Mary's. It's part of the festivities for the switching on of the Christmas lights. If you haven't seen them, yet you've missed out. They must be the best modern stained glass in the country, in the opinion of this observer. They were designed by Brian Campbell, who used to teach art at school.
The window in the picture has views of school and other recognisable buildings in Wigton. But it also rectifies a particular physics problem: it has the rainbow colours in the correct order.
The second picture here shows the older stained glass above the altar. There is also a rainbow on it. The colours are in the WRONG ORDER! And I have to look at it every week! I'd like to think that this is evidence that physics education in Wigton has improved in the last century!
Tuesday, 17 November 2009
Horizon tonight
It will be on the BBC iplayer all week.
My trip to London
Monday, 9 November 2009
Melvyn Bragg's book about science
I was particularly interested in what he said in the introduction to the book: "Although I greatly enjoyed maths at school, and at one stage wanted to take it in the sixth form, I was never enticed into physics. This is not to blame the teachers, for, soon after World War II and in a small Northern grammar school, teachers, especially it seemed in physics, came and went at some speed." That's our school! Hopefully he'd be enticed into physics if he were here now.
This is a great book and you ought to read it. I'd also recommend looking at the new stained glass windows in the church installed by Melvyn Bragg to spot all the amazing little Wigton details.
My letter was published
Thursday, 5 November 2009
Searching for uranium in Dumfries
Tuesday, 3 November 2009
Monday, 2 November 2009
Horizon BBC 2 Tuesday 3 November
BBC2 Tuesday 3 Nov at 9pm for an hour. If you miss it, it'll be on the BBC i-player for a week.
Tuesday, 27 October 2009
Successes and failures
However, we climbed Schiehallion yesterday - photos next week when I've got broadband again. There's a large plaque at the bottom commemorating Nevill Maskelyne's gravity experiment in 1774. I've collected some rocks so we can check the mass of the mountain by a density and map method in the lab. The cloud clearer when we were on the summit and we could see half of Scotland.
The nearest village has one of the oldest trees in Europe and claims to be the birthplace of Pontius Pilate. How weird.
The musical stones in church last Thursday were entertaining. They have been made up into a xylophone and were nowhere near as big as I'd expected. I've seen photos of Sigur Ros playing a much bigger stone xylophone. Still, I now want to know why you can get a note out of the metamorphosed hornfels but not the original slate country rock.
Tuesday, 20 October 2009
Letter to The Cumberland News
In the farming supplement of the The Cumberland News 16 October 2009, Austen Davies lays into Professor MacKay in his View from the Trough column. The article starts really well - I agree with a lot of the commentary. Nor does it bother me that Austen Davies is vehemently against wind farms. I'm not sure where I stand on that issue. I love the mountains and the way I read the book is that Mackay thinks too much land would be needed so it's not really feasible.
But I don't like a level of debate that descends to personal attacks. "Wildly staring eyes of Vulcan-looking Professor David MacKay". So I've written a letter in defence of the book! Let's see if it gets published. Now is this citizenship?
Skiddaw musical stones performance
Monday, 19 October 2009
Skiddaw musical stones
The stones are normally kept in Keswick museum and I think that they are like a giant xylophone.
There is a bridge in the valley between Blencathra and Skiddaw, which has, according to my guidebook, similar slabs. It said that if you tap them gently with a hammer, the slabs should ring. Trouble is, they have been cemented in, which is damping the vibrations.
The physics goes like this: When you hammer them, a sound wave travels through the stone. It travels very fast in the solid because the atoms are close and joined. It cannot travel fast in the air, so when the vibration hits the end of the stone, very little escapes into the air and the rest is reflected. If the dimensions are such that the reflected waves are in phase with the outgoing waves, then a standing wave is set up and that is what you hear. Damping removes energy from the vibrations.
Friday, 16 October 2009
Searching for radon gas
So last Saturday I hid a piece at Sandale Quarry. I'll collect it in a couple of weeks. You need a microscope to see the marks.
Friday, 9 October 2009
Electric field lines
Don't look back into the sun
Tuesday, 6 October 2009
To undefined and beyond...
Friday, 2 October 2009
My geiger counter
The watch belonged to my father-in-law. He bought it in 1951. In those days the luminous paint on the hands was made of a radioactive material. The final photo showa the geiger counter reading. The "safe" background reading that I took was less than 1 count per second. You can judge for yourself how dangerous a watch like this might be.
Friday, 25 September 2009
Ciamar a tha thu?
In honour of languages day, here's another highlight of my trip to Scotland. This village is the only place in the UK to have a chemical element named after it - strontium. The element was discovered nearby about 200 years ago. It is of interest to physicists because the fallout from nuclear explosions contains a lot of the radioactive isotope strontium-90. This is a problem because the body prefers to take this in place of calcium for bones. It has a half life of about 28 years so it's not good for health. It was a major problem after the Chernobyl accident.
All place names in the Highlands are anglicised versions of Gaelic names. I've been trying to learn to pronounce Gaelic. The title of this piece means "How are you?" You can reply "Tha gu math, tapadh leat" - Fine thank you.
Monday, 21 September 2009
Why do some physicists get really annoyed about string theory?
Friday, 18 September 2009
Why is the sky blue?
At sunset, when the light comes in at an angle, the light has to pass more particles to reach us. Thus more colours are scattered, leaving orange and red to reach us.
I did an experiment to show this using a projector and a bowl of milk. I introduced milk in small amounts to represent the scattering particles. The photograph shows what happened.
Monday, 14 September 2009
The search for a sun dog
What you're looking at in these two photographs is the layer of thin, high cloud. It's called cirrus if it is small, wispy cloud, and cirrostratus if it coalesces to form a layer.
At certain times, you can get a circular rainbow around The Sun as its light is refracted through ice particles in these high clouds. Sometimes you get part of it like an upside down rainbow. I'll put a newspaper photo of this up on the wall in C11.
However, sometimes, the effect is so intense that you get two fake suns, one on each side of The Sun. These are called sun dogs. I've never seen one but it is supposed to happen up to once a week in these lattitudes. Apparently the best conditions are when The Sun is low in the sky. The hunt is on.
Go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_dog for details and photos.
Thursday, 10 September 2009
The book has arrived!
See earlier post for why this book is so important.
A kid asked a question at Jodrell Bank
Tuesday, 8 September 2009
Jodrell Bank
In August, we went to Jodrell Bank. It is a radio telescope connected to Manchester University. If you are headed south on the M6, it is worth a visit - about 5 miles off the motorway just past Manchester. It only cost £2 to get in. There's a lot to see, but I'd advise a nice day because a lot of it is outside.
The idea is that stars produce waves across the whole electromagnetic spectrum, and that what we can actually see is only the tip of the ice berg. Many types of electromagnetic wave cannot get through the atmosphere, but radio waves can.
The opportunity to work at Jodrell Bank would be a good reason to look at physics at Manchester University.
You can read more about their research at http://www.jodrellbank.manchester.ac.uk/research/
Friday, 4 September 2009
You must read this book
So whether you think nuclear or wind is the future, he comes up with the numbers.
He is a Professor in the Physics Department at Cambridge University. He tries not to state his preferred future option, but I think you may detect slight bias in places!
I ordered a copy from Wigton Library (they had to get a copy sent up from Kendal!) but it will be in the school library soon. However, if you want it for free, you can download it from www.withouthotair.com
It will make you a better physicist.
Thursday, 3 September 2009
Schiehallion
- The angle of dangle was very small, much less than a degree. How did he measure it?
- How did he know which direction was vertical? You usually hang a pendulum (plumb line) to work that out.
Thursday, 27 August 2009
Physics on the top of Ben Nevis
It was awarded to CTR Wilson for his invention of the cloud chamber, a device for allowing you to see the invisible paths of radioactivity by getting vapour trails to condense where they have created ionised air molecules along the way. He was inspired to do this by his observations of clouds from the top of Ben Nevis.