Hard hitting global and local news
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Tweet The European Parliament last week rejected a fix to their cap-and-trade system that would have set a bottom floor to the price of carbon, a floor that likely helped keep California’s system functioning through a tentative start to a better shape (so far).
In the preceding post Eli pointed en passant to an article by EO Wilson where he let the cat out of the bag For many young people who aspire to be scientists, the great bugbear is mathematics. Without advanced math, how can you do serious work in the sciences? Well, I have a professional secret to share: Many of the most successful scientists in the world today are mathematically no more than semi-literate
Tweet One of the useful things the Rabett used to do was to explain what happens to the energy when a molecule, say CO 2 (carbon dioxide) although you could also say H 2 O (water vapor) or CH 4 (methane) absorbs light. For the purpose of this post, the photon would be in the infrared region of the spectrum. This is an evergreen for two classes of bunnies Bunnies who don’t realize that the molecule can also emit light. This is a popular one amongst organikers and analytical chemists whose experience with IR spectroscopy is in an absorption spectrum for analysis of samples Bunnies who think that the only way that an excited molecule can get rid of the energy is to emit a photon.   For every CO 2 molecule there are roughly 3000 2500 other molecules in the same volume of air. When a CO 2 molecule collides with one of the other molecules, almost certainly an oxygen or nitrogen molecule, energy transfer occurs. Each CO 2 molecule can be described as having translational, vibrational and rotational energy and the same is true of the collision partner. Any collision can in principle change the amount of any of these forms of energy by any amount subject to conservation of energy and momentum. The probability of this happening depends on the relative translational energy of the collision, the relative orientation of the molecules, their distance of closest approach and the distribution of energy in each of the collision partners prior to the collision. The detailed study of such effects is called collision dynamics or molecular dynamics. Fortunately, we can take thermal averages over many of these variables, either theoretically or experimentally which makes life, theory and experiments much simpler and a hell of a lot less expensive and time consuming. That sort of thing usually goes under the rubric of reaction (when there is one) kinetics or energy transfer studies when there isn’t.
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This week’s Science Friday had a segment with Lincoln Brower , an entymologist who studies the monarch butterfly. The monarch population is collapsing faster than the Arctic ice cap, with the area of their wintering grounds in Mexico going from 52 acres to less than 3 in twenty years. In Brower’s words “In previous years we had seventeen sites with colonies, this year eight of those sites had zero butterflies, and the rest of them had very few butterflies. Only one of the colonies had significant numbers. My worry is that they are winking out one by one and they may not be able to recover” There are several reasons for this, among them that the Oyamel forest is being thinned which exposes the area under the canopy and makes it harder for the butterflies to shelter from winter frost in the high forest. Monarchs have an absolutely crazy life cycle . Simplified, overwintering butterflies in Mexico (there are also populations in California) leave Mexico in late March and head for Texas, where they feed on milkweed and create a new generation. The new generation is short lived, and starts the migration north to the Great Lakes region and the east coast. They, in turn, lead to two other short lived generation, with the fourth and final one being the one that migrates back to Oyamel and overwinters. You can follow this on Journey North , a science activity for young and old. Monarch larvae are fussy eaters, depending on milkweed the way that pandas depend on bamboo. It is the only thing that they feed on in all stages of their lives. This has made them indirectly vulnerable to GMCs. The introduction of Roundup Ready crops has lead to broadcast spreading of Roundup, which kills everything EXCEPT the Roundup Ready crops, including the milkweed (and also nectar yielding plants which does nasty things for pollinators). This breaks the Monarch’s lifecycle