Tag Archives: Education

The Anticipatron: The Next Three Days

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The Anticipatron: The Next Three Days

A Path to Bar Karma: Watch – Create – Discuss

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A Path to Bar Karma: Watch – Create – Discuss

Creating Bar Karma: The Creation Studios Community

How does the audience create the television program Bar Karma ? The show’s cast and creators explain.

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Creating Bar Karma: The Creation Studios Community

Anti- Bullying Week: Boys tease girl for having Star Wars bottle

“November 15-19 is Anti-Bullying Week at the schools. Like so many others, I have been reading with dismay about the recent victims of bullying, and I ache inside for the pain these young people have experienced. I have often thought of bullying as a problem that faces children older than mine, but a recent conversation with my first grader has given me pause. Maybe it starts right here, right now with our little ones. At summer's end, Katie and I went to Target to pick out her backpack, lunchbox and water bottle for the new school year. After great deliberation, she chose a Star Wars water bottle to match her Star Wars backpack. Katie loves Star Wars, and she was very excited about her new items. For the first few months of school, she proudly filled her water bottle herself and helped me pack her lunch each morning. But a week ago, as we were packing her lunch…” Those boys must've been sith sympathizers. added by: Agent_Alpha

First Planet Found Beyond Our Galaxy

A New Planet — from Beyond the Galaxy Read more: http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,2032054,00.html#ixzz15hGdcBa9 By Michael D. Lemonick Thursday, Nov. 18, 2010 Picture: This artist's impression shows HIP 13044 b, an exoplanet orbiting a star that entered our galaxy, the Milky Way, from another galaxy. AFP / Getty Images Read more: http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,2032054,00.html#ixzz15hH2S4xq Billions of years before the Sun was born, the Milky Way galaxy flicked out its gravitational tongue and slurped down a tiny neighboring galaxy that had ventured too close. The evidence for that ancient act of cosmic cannibalism is the still-digesting remains of the meal: a handful of relatively nearby stars known as the Helmi Stream, whose weird orbits — above and below the plain of the galaxy — are a tipoff to their weird origin. Now one of those stars has a second claim to fame. HIP 13044, as it's unglamorously known, has a planet whirling around it — the first planet ever found from outside the Milky Way. Aside from its extra-galactic origin, the planet itself, found with a medium-size telescope at the European Southern Observatory in Chile, and described in a new paper in Science, isn't especially remarkable. It's a bit bigger than Jupiter and orbits its parent star in about 16 days — a “year” so short it would once have been considered impossible for so giant a planet, until multiple discoveries of many similar worlds proved such a revolution rate to be pretty common. (See pictures of the labor of space exploration.) It's the star itself that makes the discovery of a planet surprising, for a couple of reasons. For one thing, its age — perhaps 7 or 8 billion years — means that while HIP 13044 was once much like the Sun, it's gone through a dramatic change of life. As it burned through its supply of hydrogen, the star would have swelled to become a so-called red giant, tens, or even hundreds of times its original size. When that happens to our Sun billions of years from now, Earth will probably be destroyed. Indeed, there's some circumstantial evidence that HIP 13044 may have gulped down a few planets itself, says the paper's lead author Johny Setiawan, of Germany's Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, in Heidelberg. “The star is a fast rotator,” he says, “and theory predicts that if a star swallows a planet its rotation rate should increase.” But the new planet, called HIP 13044b, survived the cataclysm. That's probably because the Jupiter-size world originally occupied a Jupiter-like orbit, much farther from its star than Earth is from the Sun. It spiraled in to its present orbit only after HIP 13044 shrank back to a more dignified size — another common stage of life for stars, which return to their original dimensions when they start burning the helium in their core. A tiny handful of planets have been seen orbiting stars that are currently red giants, but this is the first to be found in the next chapter of a star's life. (See pictures of Russia's cosmonaut training center.) The other thing that makes the star unusual is its composition. The Sun is mostly hydrogen and helium, but it also has significant traces of heavier elements like oxygen, carbon and iron, a quality astronomers call “metallicity” despite the non–metallic nature of some of those elements. “In the Milky Way,” says Setiawan, “the more metals a star has, the more likely it is to have planets.” The reason for that is simple: both stars and planets coalesce out of the same vast pool of dust and gas. The higher the metallicity, the bigger the supply of building material and the likelier that some will be left over to form planets. Dwarf galaxies like the one in which HIP 13044 was born, however — and like the two dozen or so that still orbit the Milky Way — have stars that are notably metal-poor. It was unclear until now whether that meant they'd also be planet-poor. The fact that Setiawan and his colleague Rainer Klement, also of the Max Planck Institute, found one so easily suggests this isn't the case. “Either they were incredibly lucky,” says Eric Ford, a planet-searcher at the University of Florida, “or planets aren't uncommon around stars like these.” Whatever the answer, HIP 13044b is clearly a very different world from any we've seen before, one that — without the aid of celestial metals — formed in a very different way. And that in turn suggests that the field of planetary science, which seemed so tidy and settled as recently as the 1990s, is still full of surprises. added by: EthicalVegan

A New Planet — from Beyond the Galaxy

Billions of years before the Sun was born, the Milky Way galaxy flicked out its gravitational tongue and slurped down a tiny neighboring galaxy that had ventured too close. The evidence for that ancient act of cosmic cannibalism is the still-digesting remains of the meal: a handful of relatively nearby stars known as the Helmi Stream, whose weird orbits — above and below the plain of the galaxy — are a tipoff to their weird origin. Now one of those stars has a second claim to fame. HIP 13044, as it's unglamorously known, has a planet whirling around it — the first planet ever found from outside the Milky Way. Aside from its extra-galactic origin, the planet itself, found with a medium-size telescope at the European Southern Observatory in Chile, and described in a new paper in Science, isn't especially remarkable. It's a bit bigger than Jupiter and orbits its parent star in about 16 days — a “year” so short it would once have been considered impossible for so giant a planet, until multiple discoveries of many similar worlds proved such a revolution rate to be pretty common http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,2032054,00.html added by: unimatrix0

Tropical Forest Diversity Increased during Ancient Global Warming Event

hmmmm….interesting implications: The steamiest places on the planet are getting warmer. Conservative estimates suggest that tropical areas can expect temperature increases of 3 degrees Celsius by the end of this century. Does global warming spell doom for rainforests? Maybe not. Carlos Jaramillo, staff scientist at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, and colleagues report in the journal Science that nearly 60 million years ago rainforests prospered at temperatures that were 3–5 degrees higher and at atmospheric carbon dioxide levels 2.5 times today’s levels. “We’re going to have a novel climate scenario,” said Joe Wright, staff scientist at STRI, in a 2009 Smithsonian symposium on Threats to Tropical Forests. “It will be very hot and wet, and we don’t know how these species are going to react.” By looking back in time, Jaramillo and collaborators identified one example of a hot, wet climate: rainforests were doing very well. Researchers examined pollen trapped in rock cores and outcrops—from Colombia and Venezuela—formed before, during and after an abrupt global warming event called the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum that occurred 56.3 million years ago. The world warmed by 3-5 degrees C. Carbon dioxide levels doubled in only 10,000 years. Warm conditions lasted for the next 200,000 years. Contrary to speculation that tropical forests could be devastated under these conditions, forest diversity increased rapidly during this warming event. New plant species evolved much faster than old species became extinct. Pollen from the passionflower plant family and the chocolate family, among others, were found for the first time. More at the link: http://newsdesk.si.edu/releases/tropical-forest-diversity-increased-during-ancie… added by: Incredulous

Canadian boy’s giant maple leaf gets Guinness World Record!

You've brought a tear to our collective eyes young fella well done! We're famous for other leafy plants as well ;P http://www.thestar.com/news/article/892758–pickering-boy-s-giant-maple-leaf-get… added by: dudefromtherock

Fellow student charged with murder in the death of Pearland, Texas teenager

PEARLAND, Texas – A Pearland student is facing murder charges in the death of an 18-year-old classmate who went missing Tuesday afternoon. Police said Hermilo Vildo Moralez, 19, was identified as a person of interest in the disappearance of Josh Wilkerson Tuesday after officers noticed Moralez loitering in the area of Wilkerson’s abandoned vehicle. Wilkerson was last seen at his high school, Pearland ISD’s PACE Center, around noon on Tuesday. His parents reported him missing after finding his car abandoned at a shopping center in the 5000 block of W. Broadway. Police said they found Wilkerson’s shoes and backpack in a dumpster near his vehicle. When they initially questioned Moralez at the shopping center, investigators said he falsely identified himself and refused to give his address. According to court documents, Moralez told them he knew Wilkerson from school, and he’d seen him earlier that day. Once his true identity was discovered, Moralez was taken into custody and charged with failure to identify himself. Investigators, along with dozens of volunteers and members of Texas EquuSearch, launched a search effort for Wilkerson Tuesday afternoon. As their investigation progressed, police said Moralez agreed to cooperate with search-and-rescue activities. While walking with detectives through a field Wednesday afternoon, investigators said Moralez, who was handcuffed at the time, tried to pull a detective’s weapon from his holster. Moralez was immediately restrained and returned to the city jail. He was then charged with attempting to take a weapon from a peace officer. Wilkerson’s body was found in a field near FM 518 and FM 521 around 6:30 p.m. Wednesday. According to court documents, Moralez told investigators that Wilkerson had given him a ride home from school Tuesday and made a pass at him. Moralez said he pushed Wilkerson off, and the two began to fight near the back patio of his father’s home. Moralez told police that during the fight, he grabbed a wooden rod and hit Wilkerson with it several times. He said when he got up off the ground, Wilkerson didn’t move. Investigators said Moralez then partially burned the body before dumping it in the field. When police found Wilkerson’s body, they noted that the teen’s hands and feet were bound, according to court documents. Investigators said they went back to the scene of the crime and found a large amount of blood on the patio and a bloody wooden rod in a nearby field. Moralez was charged with murder Thursday and was being held without bond. He is also awaiting trial on an unrelated harassment charge. added by: edbr

You Park Like an Asshole Helps You Share Your Feelings with Idiot Parkers

It's almost daily routine that you run into someone parking in two spots, way too far over the line, or in a spot designed for a car half the size. You Park Like an Asshole helps you fight back. Some people have no talent for parking a car, but that lack of talent transcends into assholism the moment a person stops caring about how their poor parking affects everyone else. You Park Like An Asshole is a helpful web site that provides you with downloadable notices you can leave on a poorly parked car to let them know you don't approve. You just tick a few boxes and leave it on the car. Assuming the offending parker has internet access, they can visit youparklikeanasshole.com and learn all about their problem. You Park Like An Asshole reminds us all not to turn these notices into stickers. The idea is to let people know that they're placing their own convenience above everyone else's and that's not fair, not to potentially cause any cosmetic damage to a vehicle—whether it belongs to an asshole or not. http://lifehacker.com/5693009/you-park-like-an-asshole-helps-you-share-your-feel… added by: pjacobs51