Ask Jeeves about science

Here’s a top listing of questions that bring readers to sciencebase from the Ask Jeeves search engine. We cannot promise to answer them all here, but search the site and you may find enlightenment or at the very least some factlets of even more interest.

How old was Einstein when he wrote his papers on relativity?
When were the largest glaciers in history?
Where can I find some wow facts about sodium?
When Mars will look as large as the full Moon to the naked eye?
How much does the Japanese government spend on computers?
What planet is most like Earth?
How many barrels of oil do Americans use every day?
What is the width of a dime?
Why can’t frogs smoke?
How far is Sedna from the sun?
How do humans recognize faces?
What killed Otzi the iceman?
Where is the Earth’s crust thickest?

Resurrecting Pluto

As Sciencebase reported recently, a session of the International Astronomical Union (IAU), meeting in Prague, during August passed a resolution re-defining the nature of the planets of our solar system. Apparently, only about 428 of the IAU’s almost 10000 membership was involved in the voting. The original proposal would have led to an expansion of our solar system from the familiar nine planets to 12, for now. But, as we now know things turned out very differently.

This proposal was modified at the conference, with the aim being to exclude from the definition of planet all but the eight largest planets, which meant Pluton was dwarved. The vote leaned towards this definition, much to the chagrin of the wider IAU community, which believes neither definition was subject to critical review by the broader planetary
science community prior to the conference, despite simple means to do so.

A grass roots petition stating: “We, as planetary scientists and astronomers, do not agree with the IAU’s
definition of a planet, nor will we use it. A better definition is needed” has now emerged – http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/planetprotest

According to a press release from the Planetary Science Institute, in less than five days more than 300
professional planetary scientists and astronomers had signed the petition. “The list of signatories includes researchers who have studied every kind of planet in the solar system, as well as asteroids, comets, the Kuiper Belt, and planet interactions with space environment. They have been involved in the robotic exploration of the solar system from some of the earliest missions to Cassini/Huygens, the missions to Mars, ongoing missions to the innermost and outermost reaches of our solar system, and are leading missions preparing to be launched,” says the release.

The list also includes prominent experts in the field of planet formation and evolution, planetary atmospheres,
planetary surfaces and interiors, and includes international prize-winning researchers.

“This petition gives substantial weight to argument that the IAU definition of planet does not meet fundamental scientific standards and should be set aside,” states petition organizer Dr. Mark Sykes, Director of the Planetary Science Institute in Tucson, Arizona. “A more open process, involving a broader cross section of the community engaged in
planetary studies of our own solar system and others should be undertaken.”

So, as we predicted, Pluto’s status could be changed yet again. Meanwhile the guy on the Clapham omnibus will probably stick with the idea that Pluto is a planet regardless of the outcome of this debate.

Premature diagnostics

An MRI scan can help in predicting future developmental outcomes of pre-term infants, according to US researchers. The scan reveals abnormalities no picked up by cranial ultrasound and can be used to predict problems that would become apparent by age two years.

Terrie Inder of Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis working with colleagues in New Zealand and Australia have discovered that MRI can reveal brain abnormalities in very premature babies born at 30 weeks or less. They monitored 167 pre-term infants from birth to age two years having graded these abnormalities to see if there is a correlation with any severe delays in cognitive and psychomotor development, cerebral palsy, or hearing or visual impairments in the two-year olds.

Read on…

Chitika

No doubt I’ll get round to creating a Chitika stream for my readers viewing pleasure. But, first, just check out the blurb with which they try to entice bloggers:

“Chitika eMiniMalls bring life to product promotion on the web. With eMiniMalls you can hand-select specific products (or product categories) targeted to the content of your webpage, and provides your users with robust comparative shopping information to make an informed buying decision – before they leave your site. As users click, you make money.”

Unfortunately for a science blog and its readership, they don’t yet have a minimall for silica gel TLC plates and test-tubes, maybe one day.