Tag Archives: Chemistry

Winning Science December 4, 2013

The Michelin Man might be getting a green makeover. Michelin is going to spend $71 million over the next eight years investigating the possibility of making their tires out of plant based materials. Several other tire companies have started to incorporate other materials, like orange oil, into their tires. More companies are looking into this kind of innovation.  Given the increase in the cost of butadiene, a component of synthetic rubber, it’s not surprising.

Going green

Going green

Its also worth noting that most other companies that have incorperated other materials have done so for performance as opposed to going green.

With the holidays officially started, NPR is giving us a little lesson in the chemistry surrounding cookies, a classic holiday treat. With some help from TED Talks, they take us through all of the chemical reactions that lead to such deliciousness. From the melting of butter and creation of steam to the generation of carbon dioxide which cause the cookies to rise, they hit it all.

There be chemistry in that there oven!

There be chemistry in that there oven!

Now I really want cookies…

As many of you know, I’m a huge supporter of space exploration.  While I’d love to see NASA doing that exploration, it’s good to see another country jumping on the space bandwagon.  China is expecting its lunar rover Jade Rabbit to be reaching the moon shortly after a Monday lift off. This probe is important not only for China’s developing space program but also because it marks the first time since 1976 that a craft of any kind has attempted a “soft” landing on the moon.

If you're going to call it Jade Rabbit, the least you can do is paint it green and give it some bunny ears.

If you’re going to call it Jade Rabbit, the least you can do is paint it green and give it some bunny ears.

With over a billion people in the country, one would think they could come up with a better name than Jade Rabbit.

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Winning Science October 9, 2013

While we here at Therefore I Geek are focused on NYCC (I still have to finish laundry…) the science community is focused on their highest awards, the Nobel Prize. Named for inventor Alfred Nobel and originally funded with the majority of his estate, the awards are given to those to confer the “greatest benefit on mankind”.  Most people are familiar with the Peace Prize, however prizes are also awarded in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, and Economics. Today we’ll look at the winners in Physics, Chemistry and Medicine.

This year’s physicists are probably some of the most well known physicists in the world, and certainly the best known of this year’s Nobel laureates.  François Englert and Peter Higgs are well known for the Higgs Boson.  The Higgs Boson is frequently known as the “god particle” because it may be the key to explaining why particles, such as electrons, have mass. These particles provide the mechanism by which Einstein’s Theory of Relativity equates mass to energy.

http://xkcd.com/812/

This is what happens when you look for the Higgs Boson.

An amusing side note, the Nobel Committee was unable to get in contact with Peter Higgs and there is a distinct possibility that he doesn’t even know he has won the prize.

In Chemistry, the Nobel Prize goes to Arieh Warshel, Martin Karplus, and Michael Levitt who pioneered computer modeling of chemical reactions. This eventually allowed for solving complex chemical equations without having to consult dozens of books for information. These programs were first used to model how enzymes break down toxins in the body.

www.macworld.com

So much power!

The programs were first written in the 1960’s when the most powerful computers in the world were less powerful than my iPhone.

James E. Rothman, Randy W. Schekman, Thomas C. Südhof have been awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine. These men are responsible for determining the mechanism that cells use to get the right stuff to the right place at the right time.  Each of the winners was responsible for figuring out a piece of the mystery.

www.tescfoundation.org

It’s the cellular version of “what can brown do for you”

It’s like a global logistics network, but contained completely within a cell.

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Winning Science July 10, 2013

So I don’t really understand chemistry, and now apparently those few rules of chemistry don’t apply in space. And its due to quantum tunneling, which is just a bizarre, but cool phenomenon.

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And even more awesome, the effect was observed with alcohol.

A Japanese company is now one step closer to giving us Iron Man. Leave it to the Japanese to come up with something this cool

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Just please tell me they’re not going to try and have sex with it.

Bad news for Android users. BlueBox has discovered a master key that can make 99% of Android devices into zombies.

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Makes me a more than a little glad that I switched to Apple, though I’m sure the government is watching me either way.

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