Saturday, September 29, 2018

Sept. 29, 2018

What catches our eye

Brain selects visual objects according to specific mechanism


Source: Technical University of Munich (TUM)



This is really worth reading. The implications are “eye opening”.

Summary:

Our unconscious gaze is controlled by an automatic selection process computed by a neural network in the brain. Details of this computation have now been studied and could soon become relevant for robotic implementations.






Does consciousness create the material world?  Before we answer this question, it’s important to first go into what the material world is actually composed of at a fundamental level.  “Reality” is not simply made of tiny physical pieces, like a bunch of marbles or tiny little bowling balls.  Molecules are made out of atoms, and atoms are made out of subatomic particles such as protons and electrons which are 99.99999% empty space and electrical spin. These are then made out of quarks, which then are a part of a Superstring field which consists of vibrating strings that give rise to fundamental particles based on the nature of their vibration. 

We interact with a world of physical objects, but this is only due to the way our brains translate sensory data.  At the smallest and most fundamental scales of nature, the idea of “physical reality” is non-existent.  From the Nobel Prize winning father of quantum mechanics Neils Bohr, “Everything we call real is made of things that cannot be regarded as real.  In quantum mechanics hasn’t profoundly shocked you yet, you don’t understand it well enough.” When you touch your hands together, it is really just empty space touching more empty space, with the slightest ingredient of energetic spin of these minuscule particles.  The constituents of matter have absolutely no physical structure.







Young children are significantly more likely than adults to have their opinions and decisions influenced by robots, according to new research. Professor Belpaeme said: "People often follow the opinions of others and we've known for a long time that it is hard to resist taking over views and opinions of people around us. We know this as conformity. But as robots will soon be found in the home and the workplace, we were wondering if people would conform to robots.

"What our results show is that adults do not conform to what the robots are saying. But when we did the experiment with children, they did. It shows children can perhaps have more of an affinity with robots than adults, which does pose the question: what if robots were to suggest, for example, what products to buy or what to think?"





Ah….and then there is the issue of time to consider in all this. Only the certainty of change is absolute.



speaking of time:

Estimating When Life Could Have Arisen on Earth?


Barring those who adhere to the Judeo-Christian-Muslim mythology, this is truly an interesting question.

The question how life began on Earth has always been a matter of profound interest to scientists. But just as important as how life emerged is the question of when it emerged. In addition to discerning how non-living elements came together to form the first living organisms (a process known as abiogenesis), scientists have also sought to determine when the first living organisms appeared on Earth.
Life/earth pic

In a new study by a team of Canadian researchers, the question of when life emerged on Earth is constrained using two approaches. By combining astrophysical and geophysical evidence with biosignatures in geological samples, they estimate that life emerged roughly 200 to 800 million years after Earth became habitable (ca. 3.7 billion years ago). This study could have drastic implications for our understanding of life and how long it takes to emerge on Earth-like planets.

The study which describes their findings was recently published in the journal Astrobiology under the title  “Constraining the Time Interval for the Origin of Life on Earth“. The study was led by PhD student Ben K. D. Pearce, and included several of his colleagues from the Origins Institute and Dept of Physics and Astronomy at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario.
https://www.universetoday.com/139887/estimating-when-life-could-have-arisen-on-earth/

Relevant to this question are these tantalizing bits of new knowledge. 

Meet Ligulalepis, our common fishy ancestor.


Searching in limestone outcrops of New South Wales, Australia, a team led by scientists from Flinders University recently unearthed the second skull found to date — and the most complete one yet — of this tiny prehistoric bony fish.

The researchers applied modern scanning techniques and powerful X-rays to these two preserved specimens — each only about a centimetre across — to reveal hidden features of Ligulalepis’ brain cavity. The 3D anatomical picture helped the team place the 400-million-year-old creature at the base of the evolutionary tree that leads to all bony fish, one offshoot of which includes humans and all other four-limbed vertebrates.
“This resolves the big question about what the ancestor of all modern bony fish looked like,” said Flinders paleontologist and lead study author, Alice Clement, in a press release. The results were published in the journal eLife.

https://www.natureindex.com/institution-outputs/australia/flinders-university/5139072d34d6b65e6a002140?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=AugRH&utm_term=paid&utm_content=Flinders#highlight

Scientists in Siberia have made an extraordinary find: the fossilized remains of an extinct baby Palaeolithic horse, in almost perfect condition.





Dug out from the permafrost in Siberia's Batagaika crater - AKA the "Doorway to the Underworld" - the tiny colt is so beautifully preserved, it looks like it could be sleeping. But the equine died a long time ago - between 30,000 and 40,000 years, during the Upper Palaeolithic. 





More cool animal stuff coming but change of pace needed. Yeah, you guessed it – astronomy!



Dark matter – once understood (at least basically), profoundly expands a person’s concept of the universe.



The known universe contains trillion of galaxies with billions of stars in it. Looking at the big picture, the galaxies in universe are connected to each other by an invisible web of dark matter. Due to some clever use of gravitational lensing these threads of dark matter are now captured for the first time. A team of astronomers at the University of Waterloo in Canada has seen the unseeable using the space-bending effects of dark-matter to create a visual of their dark features by combining the catalogues of galaxy groups that act as lenses with catalogues of data on the light-sources behind them.




Another “mind expander”



A recent observation of the red giant star Antares, the largest in the constellation Scorpio—shows that from its cosmic depths, the star is expelling unknown matter as it approaches the end of its life. In the insides of the star Antares lies a powerful and hitherto unknown force that astronomers have not seen until now.


  Someday, sooner or later, the sun we see every day will become a giant star and grow to such an extent that it will swallow the Earth and other planets in the inner solar system. For scientists, this inescapable fate involves the challenge of looking beyond our solar system to decipher and understand the evolutionary cycles of these incandescent stars and their mechanisms at each stage.
 

A Japanese Company is About to Test a Tiny Space Elevator… in Space

Let’s be honest, launching things into space with rockets is a pretty inefficient way to do things. Not only are rockets expensive to build, they also need a ton of fuel in order to achieve escape velocity. And while the costs of individual launches are being reduced thanks to concepts like reusable rockets and space planes, a more permanent solution could be to build a Space Elevator.

And while such a project of mega-engineering is simply not feasible right now, there are many scientists and companies around the world that are dedicated to making a space elevator a reality within our lifetimes. For example, a team of Japanese engineers from Shizuoka University‘s Faculty of Engineering recently created a scale model of a space elevator that they will be launching into space tomorrow (on September 11th).



The concept for a space elevator is quite simple. Basically, it calls for the construction of a space station in geosynchronous orbit (GSO) which is tethered to Earth by a tensile structure. A counterweight would be attached to the other end of the station to keep the tether straight while the Earth’s rotational velocity ensures that it remains over the same spot. Astronauts and crews would travel up and down the tether in cars, which would remove the need for rocket launches altogether.





Our successes in exploring space have been many and varied. One of our most reliable and worthy was the Cassini probe of Saturn. It is now dead.



Cassini is dead; long live Cassini. On the evening of 14 September, 2017, the Cassini spacecraft sent back its final images of the Saturn system. Early this morning, it sank into the top of the giant planet’s atmosphere and melted. It survived about 30 seconds longer than scientists expected.




 
A little history that changed the world


According to his 18-year-old nephew Pliny the Younger’s heart-stopping firsthand account, written to the historian Tacitus, the sky turned black as Mount Vesuvius erupted, spewing fire and ash over Pompeii and its neighboring towns. Within a matter of days, almost the entire Bay of Naples, as well as thousands of its inhabitants—including the eminently quotable Elder statesman—were buried. It was a movie-quality tragedy that today may incite a fear of increased natural disasters in our own age of rapid global warming.

But the event also served to freeze a moment in the past, and the perfectly preserved ruins—petrified over the centuries—offer the world’s most complete picture of ancient Roman life.





 
The terrible Lisbon earth quake 

Most of the population of Lisbon was in church when the first quake hit. It was the morning of All Saints Day, 1755, and this was the most prominent city in one of the world’s most powerful countries. None of that mattered, of course, when the shaking started. 


The Lisbon quake is still a defining moment in the city’s history. Estimated to be an 8.5 magnitude or higher on the modern-day Richter scale, it was followed by two smaller quakes and a tsunami, as high as 15 meters, then by days of fires that engulfed the city. Hundreds of aftershocks happened over subsequent months. No official death count exists, but sources both contemporary and modern estimate somewhere between 10,000 and 60,000 people died (the population numbered about 1 million at the time). About 82 percent of the city’s buildings were destroyed, among them churches, cathedrals, royal palaces and the opera house. 


That the rich and the outwardly godly weren’t spared in the quake may have been one factor that spurred what amounted to an existential crisis among some Europeans. While many did turn to religion in the time of crisis — and 18th-century Portugal had its share of spiritual leaders blaming the quake on human sin, a phenomenon that persists today — science and philosophy also had their part to play. Thinkers like Voltaire, Rousseau and Immanuel Kant (there’s more on Kant; keep going) all meditated on the earthquake and what it meant for humankind and its trust in fate.  
 
https://www.ozy.com/flashback/how-portugals-biggest-disaster-launched-a-scientific-discipline/88556?utm_source=SM&utm_medium=Facebook&utm_name=Organic

                                                   The Power of Nature

Some more animal stuff, there are so many species and all interesting……well, to a biologist anyway.......or a "wildlife" photographer





 


 The highly venomous forest cobra, the largest of Africa’s true cobras, is not one, but five separate species, according to a new study. At first glance, forest cobras, which can grow to lengths of nearly 3 meters (10 feet) and are frequently kept in zoos, research institutes and private collections, may not look very different. But Wolfgang Wüster, a herpetologist at Bangor University, U.K., and colleagues chanced upon the snake’s potential diversity around 15 years ago by accident.
The team had been working on another species, and had collected some DNA samples of forest cobras from captive collections for comparison.

“To our surprise we found that the mitochondrial DNA sequence differences between [the forest cobra samples] were far greater than between clearly distinct species of other cobras, even though the forest cobras did not appear very distinct visually,” Wüster told Mongabay.





  Vultures, often overlooked and underappreciated ( but intelligently revered by the ancient Egyptians), are up against eager hunters, dangerous power lines, and accidental poisoning. Ecologist Jen Guyton is studying what a world without the critically endangered birds would look like—and in Africa’s Gorongosa National Park, it becomes an ecosystem with a missing link.






The world's only freshwater seal dives under the winter ice of Russia's Lake Baikal. How the species established a home in this place—the oldest, deepest, and most voluminous mass of freshwater in the world—remains a mystery. Experts hypothesize that members of the species may have traveled up ice-choked rivers from the Arctic Ocean during the last ice age.




   When temperatures drop, macaques huddle together to pool their body heat, forming what’s known as a saru dango, or “monkey dumpling.” This behavior is especially important for Japanese macaques, which live in colder climates than any other non-human primate.






 Megabats constitute the suborder Megachiroptera, and its only family Pteropodidae of the order Chiroptera (bats). They are also called fruit bats, Old World fruit bats, or, especially the genera Acerodon and Pteropus, flying foxes. Megabats are found in tropical and subtropical areas of Eurasia, Africa, and Oceania.  Compared to insectivorous bats, fruit bats are relatively large, and with some exceptions, do not navigate by echolocation. They are herbivores and rely on their keen senses of sight and smell to locate food.

                                                Always wondered about this.

  They say practice makes perfect, and believe it or not, that's just what this Eurasian Ay and Sparrow Hawk are doing—practicing their predatory strikes.


A little fancy detecting:

Decoding the Symbolism in Hans Holbein’s “Ambassadors”



 The artist’s most iconic painting, however, eludes direct interpretation. Jean de Dinteville and Georges de Selve (1533), also known as The Ambassadors, has been heavily scrutinized by centuries of historians. The double portrait, proudly displayed at London’s National Gallery, remains a fascinating enigma within which every detail seems to suggest multiple meanings.





As different as the next two pictures are, they both speak of dignity in my mind – a bit weird I know but some of you will get it (not a trick question).

   Claudette Colbert as Cleopatra confronting Caesar

 
 A forgotten presence: Hollow Horn Bear, speaker for the Brulé branch of The Lakota, 1907


Never forgotten: my grandmother Ami told me this when I was just a boy. 



 Got me to thinking even then.




Till next time, may The Great Mystery be kind to you.