Hello Science Aficionados and General Lovers of Science as well,
I don't really need to say anything about what an incredible year this has been. It has been so incredible that this will be the last SciSchmooze of the year! (We are going to take a break the week after christmas since there is only one event listed between then and next year!)
Normally I would go on about science and society laced with lots of links. I'm going to be a bit more straightforward this time. Needless to say bioscience has lead the way this year and we are now hopefully on the brink of winning the Covid wars.
There are five events left on our calendar, four are about astronomy, and two are about the Great Conjunction! First off, watch
Still 2020 with the SciSchmooze
Submitted by
admin
from the desk of Herb Masters
Greetings Fans of Knowledge, Science, and Reason
We truly do live in amazing times. 2020 has been a staggeringly rough year. There are many things to be bummed about, the willful covidnorance and ignorance of science overall,
Greetings Fans of Knowledge, Science, and Reason
We truly do live in amazing times. 2020 has been a staggeringly rough year. There are many things to be bummed about, the willful covidnorance and ignorance of science overall,
Thumbs Up, Thumbs Down with the SciSchmooze
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admin
from the desk of David Almandsmith
Greetings fellow travelers,
Thumbs Up
From the DNA sequence for building a protein, we know exactly what the amino acid sequence of the protein will be. However, it is largely the shape of the protein that determines its functionality with all its hydrophobic, hydrophilic, electron-rich, and electron-poor sites - and the functionalities of proteins are truly amazing. The problem of predicting the protein shape from its amino acid sequence has stymied scientists for decades. Starting twenty years ago, the effort to predict how proteins ‘fold’ (or ‘misfold’ leading to disease) as they are assembled from the ribosome was handed over to the public - to anyone who agreed to share time on their home computer to help. The Stanford-based project is named
Greetings fellow travelers,
Thumbs Up
From the DNA sequence for building a protein, we know exactly what the amino acid sequence of the protein will be. However, it is largely the shape of the protein that determines its functionality with all its hydrophobic, hydrophilic, electron-rich, and electron-poor sites - and the functionalities of proteins are truly amazing. The problem of predicting the protein shape from its amino acid sequence has stymied scientists for decades. Starting twenty years ago, the effort to predict how proteins ‘fold’ (or ‘misfold’ leading to disease) as they are assembled from the ribosome was handed over to the public - to anyone who agreed to share time on their home computer to help. The Stanford-based project is named
Giving Thanks and Vaccine Explainer in SciSchmooze
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admin
from the desk of Meenakshi Prabhune
Hello Sci-Schmoozers,
Hope you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving. Holidays are unusual this year, to say the least. It sucks to be away from family and avoid those big get-togethers we yearn for all year but there is also a lot to be thankful for. I am thankful for the efforts of frontline health care workers who have been tirelessly treating patients this year. The resilience that people have shown in these trying times is laudable; no matter how bad the situation, there are those few people around us who keep going and motivate you to keep going. Last, but not the least, I am grateful for the hard work that scientists put into research to develop vaccines in record time—exactly the positive news we needed to end the year.
The results of Phase 3 vaccine trials from Pfizer and
Hello Sci-Schmoozers,
Hope you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving. Holidays are unusual this year, to say the least. It sucks to be away from family and avoid those big get-togethers we yearn for all year but there is also a lot to be thankful for. I am thankful for the efforts of frontline health care workers who have been tirelessly treating patients this year. The resilience that people have shown in these trying times is laudable; no matter how bad the situation, there are those few people around us who keep going and motivate you to keep going. Last, but not the least, I am grateful for the hard work that scientists put into research to develop vaccines in record time—exactly the positive news we needed to end the year.
The results of Phase 3 vaccine trials from Pfizer and
Thanksgiving, Rock and Roll, and the SciSchmooze
Submitted by
admin
from the desk of Bob Siederer
Hello again Science fans!
There's quite a variety of things to talk about today. Let's start with Rock and Roll!
Well, not exactly, but indirectly. Climate change is having an effect on guitars. You probably never think about the wood that's used in making musical instruments, but climate change is causing a shortage of swamp ash, the type of wood used in Fender guitars. Rock and Roll will never sound quite the same, all because of more historic flooding along the Mississippi River.
You should not take anything for granted these days. Take north. Yes, the direction north. The magnetic north pole is moving quickly, and has left Canada, headed for Siberia!
In the cont
Hello again Science fans!
There's quite a variety of things to talk about today. Let's start with Rock and Roll!
Well, not exactly, but indirectly. Climate change is having an effect on guitars. You probably never think about the wood that's used in making musical instruments, but climate change is causing a shortage of swamp ash, the type of wood used in Fender guitars. Rock and Roll will never sound quite the same, all because of more historic flooding along the Mississippi River.
You should not take anything for granted these days. Take north. Yes, the direction north. The magnetic north pole is moving quickly, and has left Canada, headed for Siberia!
In the cont
The SciSchmooze Wants To Know
Submitted by
admin
from the desk of Herb Masters
Hello Fans of Data and Evidence, aka Science and Reason,
Just to remind you and make sure that new readers know… I am not a trained or certified (whatever that means) scientist. I grew up in a time when science was the ultimate arbiter of truth for most people I knew and is for the people I know now. Nor am I a historian or philosopher. I'm just someone who is trying to make sense out of how we know and celebrate what we know about this amazing universe. The philosophy of science keeps many of us grounded in understanding many things.
Hello Fans of Data and Evidence, aka Science and Reason,
Just to remind you and make sure that new readers know… I am not a trained or certified (whatever that means) scientist. I grew up in a time when science was the ultimate arbiter of truth for most people I knew and is for the people I know now. Nor am I a historian or philosopher. I'm just someone who is trying to make sense out of how we know and celebrate what we know about this amazing universe. The philosophy of science keeps many of us grounded in understanding many things.
A Kind SciSchmooze
Submitted by
admin
from the desk of Herb Masters
Greetings Practitioners of Science,
Wow! Is it really over? (No, but it is, mostly.) Before we go any farther I'd like you to consider some science that we haven't discussed (note you can listen to this one). I think it is something we really need to have in our communities. In addition to kindness we need to honor the
Greetings Practitioners of Science,
Wow! Is it really over? (No, but it is, mostly.) Before we go any farther I'd like you to consider some science that we haven't discussed (note you can listen to this one). I think it is something we really need to have in our communities. In addition to kindness we need to honor the
SciSchmoozing with Uncertainty
Submitted by
admin
from the desk of David Almandsmith
Water availability on the Moon?
It has been known for years that water ice exists in polar craters on the Moon. Sunlight never reaches some places in those craters and (surprisingly to me) ice there has not sublimated away into space. Now a study from the University of Colorado posits that ice could exist all over the surface in tiny nooks and crannies. And then, a NASA study confirmed finding water on the Moon on sunlit surfaces. Uh. Allow me to introduce a skeptical take on this. Phil Plait of “Bad Astronomy” suspects that the spectral signature of water found by the NASA study is best explained by
Water availability on the Moon?
It has been known for years that water ice exists in polar craters on the Moon. Sunlight never reaches some places in those craters and (surprisingly to me) ice there has not sublimated away into space. Now a study from the University of Colorado posits that ice could exist all over the surface in tiny nooks and crannies. And then, a NASA study confirmed finding water on the Moon on sunlit surfaces. Uh. Allow me to introduce a skeptical take on this. Phil Plait of “Bad Astronomy” suspects that the spectral signature of water found by the NASA study is best explained by
Celebrating 30 years of Hubble with the SciSchmooze
Submitted by
admin
from the desk of Bob Siederer
Hello again Science fans!
Before we get into the science stuff for this week, a little housekeeping. We have received occasional feedback that the SciSchmooze appears in a few subscribers' email in a very small font. We use a default font size (13 pt), but it seems various email processors think they know better and mess around with sizes. Before mailing this out each week, we test-send the Schmooze to ourselves, and it always looks fine, although my phone does ignore the default font size we use. So this week I'm attempting to get around all that by sending the Schmooze in a larger font (it isn't as easy it it might seem). Let's see if that is better.
For the first time in 19 years, a blue moon will fall on Halloween. You all know the saying "once in a blue moon" which describes the fact that having two full moons in a month is fairly rare. The last time Halloween and a blue moon coincided was in 2001. Before that...1955! There will be six in the 21st century, and two of them have already happened (including the upcoming one). Rare indeed!
There's lots more news in astronomy/cosmology. Last month I mentioned that Osiris-Rex was about to attempt to obtain samples from the asteroid Bennu.
Hello again Science fans!
Before we get into the science stuff for this week, a little housekeeping. We have received occasional feedback that the SciSchmooze appears in a few subscribers' email in a very small font. We use a default font size (13 pt), but it seems various email processors think they know better and mess around with sizes. Before mailing this out each week, we test-send the Schmooze to ourselves, and it always looks fine, although my phone does ignore the default font size we use. So this week I'm attempting to get around all that by sending the Schmooze in a larger font (it isn't as easy it it might seem). Let's see if that is better.
For the first time in 19 years, a blue moon will fall on Halloween. You all know the saying "once in a blue moon" which describes the fact that having two full moons in a month is fairly rare. The last time Halloween and a blue moon coincided was in 2001. Before that...1955! There will be six in the 21st century, and two of them have already happened (including the upcoming one). Rare indeed!
There's lots more news in astronomy/cosmology. Last month I mentioned that Osiris-Rex was about to attempt to obtain samples from the asteroid Bennu.
from the desk of Herb Masters
Hello Reader of the Science Persuasion!
As I understand it… Throughout history and prehistory, humans would observe something and try to understand it. I think it is our nature to try and understand. Early on there was little information to help understand what they were observing or experiencing. This might be the reason there have been or are so many gods. Over the years more things were observed and humans began to establish an understanding of what was real and what was supernatural. They even tried to understand more about what real things, like progressing from the original four elements of
Hello Reader of the Science Persuasion!
As I understand it… Throughout history and prehistory, humans would observe something and try to understand it. I think it is our nature to try and understand. Early on there was little information to help understand what they were observing or experiencing. This might be the reason there have been or are so many gods. Over the years more things were observed and humans began to establish an understanding of what was real and what was supernatural. They even tried to understand more about what real things, like progressing from the original four elements of