We went up to Bowscale Tarn. There was a real oddity - ice on the BOTTOM of the lake near the outflow. Everyone knows that ice is less dense than water and should float. So what happened here? We had several theories but most likely is that in this shallow water, it froze from top to bottom. Then the water at the top was the first to thaw, leaving this oddity.
The tarn used to be a very popular tourist attraction in Victorian times. In one of his worst poems (my opinion), Wordsworth quoted a legend of there being two immortal fish in the lake. If it's true, they must still be there...
If you want to read the poem, here's the link http://www.everypoet.com/archive/poetry/William_Wordsworth/william_wordsworth_340.htm
Monday, 31 January 2011
Thursday, 13 January 2011
Museum of the History of Science
The Museum of the History of Science on Broad Street in Oxford occupies a building constructed for the original Asmolean Collection - the world's first public museum. It is next to the Sheldonian Theatre, designed by Sir Christopher Wren. It is surrounded by the sculptured heads of Greek philosophers. Inside the museum, I found Einstein's chalk board - he delivered a lecture at the university many years ago. They preserved the board. Sorry about the pictures - no camera flash allowed. More to follow about this trip.
Thursday, 6 January 2011
Roberts Boyle and Hooke
During the blizzard in Oxford, I went down the High Street to find the memorial on the wall of University College. Boyle's Law for gases now comes towards the end of the Upper Sixth. I didn't know that Robert Hooke was his assistant. Hooke was Newton's bitter rival, best known in physics and engineering for Hooke's Law: the extension of a spring is directly proportional to the applied force as far as the limit of proportionality.