Happy Birthday Rolf Sievert

On May 6th 1896 Rolf Maximilian Sievert was born in Stockholm Sweden. Sievert devoted his life to the measurement and medical usage of ionizing radiation. His invention of the Sievert chamber for consistent measurement of radiation dosage helped pave the way for the safe control of ionizing radiation in medical applications. In recognition of his achievements, the SI unit for equivalent dose and efficient dose was designated the sievert, Sv, in 1979.

Professor Rolf Sievert worked with many organizations on radiation protection issues including the Swedish Radiation Protection Institute (SSI), the International Commission for Radiological Protection (ICRP) and, the International Commission for Radiation Units and Measurements (ICRU, Chairman 1956 to 1962).

For further reading:
Biography – Wikipedia
SI Unit the Sievert – Wikipedia
Rolf Sievert, the man and the unit – Karolinska Institutet
Radiobiology
BBC – h2g2 – The Measurement of Radioactivity

Happy Earth Day

I had completely forgotten that today is Earth Day until I used Google and saw their holiday logo. Very clever, a melting iceberg version of the Google logo to remind us of the dangers of global climate change.

I’m surprised none of the blogs I regularly read has yet mentioned Earth Day. The weather is absolutely beautiful today so I’m going to spend some time outdoors enjoying nature.

If your weather sucks, keeping you indoors today, here are some Earth Day links to explore:
Wikipedia
U.S. Government site
U.S. EPA
The Wilderness Society
Also, click the Google logo on their site to find more.

Some good articles for your weekend reading pleasure

A comment over at Greg Laden’s blog pointed me to this article by Neil deGrasse Tyson, The Perimeter of Ignorance. I haven’t read anything from him before today but, I have enjoyed seeing him on the PBS show, Nova Science Now. I also read another older article of his, Holy Wars and found it to be excellent. In this article he mentions, A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom By Andrew Dickson White, which I located in Google books.

A dumb question from Dr. Collins

Dr. Francis Collins (director of the National Human Genome Research Institute) posted an article on CNN to go along with his interview.

I had to admit that the science I loved so much was powerless to answer questions such as “What is the meaning of life?” “Why am I here?” “Why does mathematics work, anyway?”

Well actually there were more questions that P.Z. Myers addresses on his great blog Pharyngula. I’m a bit surprised that Dr. Collins would ask:

Why does mathematics work, anyway?

The answer should be obvious to him, mathematics works because man (a few thousand years of brilliant men actually) designed it to work. There is no magic or mystery to mathematics and I can’t see how even the most religious person can think it is anything but a human designed system that is defined to be internally consistent. This reminds me of a discussion on an engineering mail list a few years ago. Someone had calculated something and came up with 0.99… (repeating decimal). I chimed in and pointed out that 0.99… = 1, the craziness ensued as many participants would not accept this fact of mathematics. What they failed to see is that mathematics is a human designed system that has this covered in its definition. Mathematics is NOT reality although it helps the sciences understand and predict real things. I think Einstein said it best:

As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain; and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality. – Albert Einstein

Now if he had asked, why is the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter an irrational number? (PI) Then that question, to me at least, is an unknown. However, I would not be surprised if Mathematicians have some good answers to that question as well.

How to spot pseudo-technology

The Swiss Institute for Applied Environmental Technology (UMTEC) has published a great “checklist for identifying dubious technologies“. Following the advice given in the document can help you avoid wasting money on the many fraudulent miracle inventions out there. They also have a number of other publications available for download although most are not in english.

Tip of the hat to James Randi for pointing this out in his newsletter a couple weeks ago.

Thought provocing article

I read an interesting article in the Telegraph newspaper online this evening. The first comment after the article showed an all to common lack of understanding of scientific proof.

Andy Cunningham wrote “When I realised there was no Father Christmas, I realised that there can’t be a god, either.”

I should like to know how you ‘realised’ this. The two are completely different, in that it can easily be proved that Father Christmas is not real, yet nobody has offered any strong evidence that God does not exist.

Following scientific methods and principles, you can not prove that either Father Christmas or God don’t exist any more than you can prove that reindeer don’t fly. To prove that reindeer don’t fly or Father Christmas doesn’t exist he will have to use thinking that would also lead to proving God doesn’t exist. This is why the religion I was raised with had no problem with science, science could never disprove the existence of anything supernatural including God.
It is not satisfying to many people but it’s an unavoidable reality that science can’t disprove the existence of the supernatural. The existence of the supernatural is provable using scientific methods but so far it hasn’t happened. This isn’t for lack of trying mind you, much effort and money has been expended over the past hundred plus years trying. There just hasn’t been any success in the research.

A birthday salute to one of my giants

While I was preparing my Darwin day post it occurred to me that I don’t take the time to celebrate the giants upon whose shoulders I stand in my everyday work. Researching the birth dates of my personal giants it became clear that the majority have SI units named for them. Since my initial list came out too short for my purposes, I decided to add in birthdays for everyone whom has an SI unit named for them. The additions gave me a list that is long enough to sink my teeth into. My first entry doesn’t fit neatly into the categories I outlined above but, his contribution is important to embedded systems designers everywhere.

James Thomson was born February 16, 1822 in Belfast Ireland, he was the first son of James and Margaret Thomson. His mother, Margaret Gardner Thomson died in 1830 so his father James raised their seven children alone. In 1832 his father took up the Chair of Mathematics at Glasgow University and two years later at the age of twelve James and his younger brother William began studying at the university. James graduated in 1839 and began his apprenticeship as a civil engineer but do to health reasons decided he was not cut out for the hard physical labor common to civil engineers of the day. So beginning around 1843 he devoted himself to inventing machines and theoretical studies making many contributions to physics and engineering. He was living in Belfast when in 1857 he became Professor of Civil Engineering at Queen’s College. He stayed in Belfast until 1873 when he accepted the Glasgow University Regius Chair in Civil Engineering. He remained at the University of Glasgow until 1889 and died May 8, 1892.

While James Thomson had many achievements including helping his brother William (Lord Kelvin) he caught my eye because of the radian. The term radian was used in print for the first time by James on June 5, 1873 in examination questions he wrote at Queen’s College. He also helped spread the adoption of this unit of measurement in consultations with other scientists and engineers. (See A History of Mathematics By Florian Cajori, page 484) He is also credited with the invention of the non-SI unit the poundal.

The radian is the SI derived unit of measurement for a plane angle. Most people are more familiar with degrees for measuring angles however, the radian is extremely important because it encapsulates the value of PI. PI, the ratio of a circle’s circumference to its diameter is an irrational real number that can create a mess in formulas when degrees are used for the angle measurement.

So, lets raise a glass and toast James Thomson, MA, DSc, LLD, FRS for being a giant on who’s shoulders we can all stand!

References and further reading:
Biographies
Wikipedia
Dictionary of Ulster Biography
Who, Where and When: The History & Constitution of the University of Glasgow [pdf]
His father
1911 Encyclopedia Britannica
1911 Encyclopedia Britannica

The radian
Wikipedia
Angle measurement
Radian Measure
A History of Mathematics By Florian Cajori
Origin of Radians

Happy Darwin Day

Today, February 12th, we celebrate Charles Darwin‘s birthday. Take a moment to read this short biography or view his life in pictures. If you’re more ambitious you can read some of his great works at Project Gutenberg or the University of Cambridge Darwin website.

Over the past year and a half I’ve looked at the intelligent design hypothesis debate. I’ve read everything I could find written by the proponents and I can’t find anything useful in this hypothesis. It very simply boils down to a hypothesis that when you see something in biology that you can’t explain, stop looking for an explanation and simply say, it’s that way because some intelligent designer made it that way.

So, as far as I can tell, proponents of the intelligent design hypothesis are either trying to avoid doing the hard work (lazy) or are simply pushing to substitute a philosophy/religion for science. I firmly believe we should not teach laziness or philosophy/religion in science classes lest we stop all the wonderful advancements that humanity can make in coming centuries.

Per Ardua Ad Astra

Thanks to Dr. Phil Plait for reminding me of the anniversary of this tragic event.

Apollo 1 fire: 40 years ago today

I was only seven years old when this happened but, I still remember how sad I was at the loss of some of my heroes. Growing up in the sixties, the NASA Mercury, Gemini and Apollo astronauts inspired my lifelong love of science. They risked their lives on every mission to expand the boundaries of science. His blog post talks about it better than I can.

FYI – Per ardua ad astra means, Through difficulty to the stars.