Thursday, December 20, 2012

Chapter 3 QCCQ


Quote: “The term supernova was coined in the 1930s by a memorably odd astrophysicist named Fritz Zwicky. Born in Bulgaria and raised in Switzerland, Zwicky came to the California Institute of Technology in the 1920s and there at once distinguished himself by his abrasive personality and erratic talents. He didn’t seem to be outstandingly bright, and many of his colleagues considered him little more than “an irritating buffoon.” A fitness buff, he would often drop to the floor of the Caltech dining hall or other public areas and do one-armed pushups to demonstrate his virility to anyone who seemed inclined to doubt it. He was notoriously aggressive, his manner eventually becoming so intimidating that his closest collaborator, a gentle man named Walter Baade, refused to be left alone with him. Among other things, Zwicky accused Baade, who was German, of being a Nazi, which he was not. On at least one occasion Zwicky threatened to kill Baade, who worked up the hill at the Mount Wilson Observatory, if he saw him on the Caltech campus”
Comment: I think this is just a really cool back story about the guy. It’s really interesting that he was both intelligent and physically fit. It’s also interesting to hear that he got in fights with his co-workers.
Connection: With the one armed pushups part it reminds me of an article we read in English about how moving and being active helps increase brain activity.
Question: Would Zwicky’s research on supernovas be different if he interacted with people differently?

Friday, October 26, 2012

QCCQ 2


Quote: "From the tiniest throbs and wobbles of distant stars they can infer the size and character and even potential habitability of planets much too remote to be seen- planets so distant that it would take us half a million year in a spaceship to get there." 

Comment: It's so interesting that space technology has advanced so much that we can view and understand planets and stars so far out of our solar system as opposed to before when we could just barely understand the planets near us. 

Connection: I say a movie about the Hubble telescope, and how it can see farther than any other telescope and see stars millions of light years away. 

 Question: If astronomers can tell the habitability of planets so easily why is it taking so long with mars?

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Geometer Sketchpad

30-60-90 Pythagorean Tree
45-45-90 Pythagorean Tree
My Fractal

Monday, October 15, 2012

QCQ 1

Quote: "For all their devoted attention, your atoms don't actually care about you- indeed, don't even know you are there. They don't even know they are there. They are mindless particles, after all, and not even themselves alive." Comment: I thought this was funny after I read this because when I was reading it I thought it was weird that they are apart of us, but don't know we exist. Then I remembered that they aren't alive, how could they know anything. Question: Are atoms able to sense the other atoms around them, and have a feeling of shape? Do atoms feel the impulses from other atoms?