Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Merry Christmas

Check out our dance:

Send your own ElfYourself eCards

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Good luck, America!

We'll need it. We just elected a man with little experience, a shady past, Socialistic ideas, and promises to tax us hard-working people out of existence. He threatens to bankrupt the coal industry.

I believe he thinks himself to be much wiser than he really is.

Have a great four years,

Tom

Monday, October 6, 2008

Testing Math

All I want to do here is to see if I can enter an equation and have it look OK:

∫ dx cos(x) = sin(x) + C

k=1,...n 1/k ≈ log(n) + γ + 1/(2n)

Well, it's not great but it could be worse.

For hints on how to do this (as well as more info on HTML in general) see here and here.


Here's some stuff I copied from another page, to keep around for reference. This obviously needs work - I need to learn some more HTML!!


(a2 + b2)



(a2 + b2)



square root of ( a^2 + b^2 )











lim

n→∞
an








lim

n→∞
an


{ limit n -> infinity } a_n
















n = 0
an 












n = 0
an 


{ sum from n = 0 to infinity } a_n












∆u  =  Δu  = n




i = 1
2u/∂xi2










u  =  Δu  = n



i = 1
2u/xi2


Laplacian of u = Delta u = { sum from i = 1 to n } d^2u / dx_i^2












  b



a  
f(x) dx







  b



a  
f(x) dx


{ integral from a to b } f(x) dx




Saturday, September 27, 2008

Electricity is Good

All,

We've been without power since Ike, until a few hours ago. That made a little over two weeks.

The worst part was that we never had a real clue when it might come back. Centerpoint Energy published very vague maps about when certain zip codes would have their power restored. Going by zip code is too coarse; most of ours had power a week ago, but not us!

More later,

Tom

Friday, September 12, 2008

Ike approaches


The latest forecast for Hurricane Ike is discussed in an interesting note at
Jeff Master's blog. He notes that the storm is very much stronger than the indicated intensity of 2, due to its vast size. The storm surge will rival that of Carla.

He notes that a good measure of the total strength of a hurricane is its Integrated Kinetic Energy (IKE!). For Ike, this is around 149 Terajoules. For comparison, Katrina was rated at 122 Terajoules.

Sadly, I've seen several news reports about people refusing to leave Galveston Island and other low-lying areas. They face almost certain death. In fact, the police are asking them to put identifying marks on themselves, so they can be more easily identified when they are found. I can't believe it.

Time to get back to work!

Tom

Monday, September 8, 2008

This doesn't look too promising

I'm talking about Hurricane Ike; here are the latest computer models, which have it going pretty close to us in Houston:



On a more positive note, the LHC is still scheduled to start up on Wednesday. Also, experimenters at Fermilab have discovered a new type of baryon, the Ωb, which contains two strange quarks (along with a single bottom quark). (In contrast, the proton is composed of two up quarks and one down.) It mass is about 6 times that of the proton, just as expected from lattice gauge theory calculations.

Monday, September 1, 2008

A rap song about the LHC

I mentioned the coming startup of the LHC in my last post. Well, there's a great rap song on YouTube by alpinekat that explains what it is going to do! Check it out here: Large Hadron Rap

Enjoy!

Tom

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Here Come Gustav and the LHC!

Bought lots of water and batteries and gasoline today as Gustav makes its way somewhere toward the Gulf Coast. Most models show it hitting Louisiana, but what it does after that may bring a lot of rain to Houston. Houston floods very easily, being flat as a pancake.

A great site for following tropical weather is here. I've really gotten into it, watching the updated computer models as they change over time.

I guess one of the biggest stories in science these days is the eminent startup of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN in Switzerland. This accelerator will reach energies high enough to see the remaining particle needed to make the Standard Model make sense, the Higgs boson, with a mass of maybe around 250 GeV. I'll have much more to say about this later. For now, you can follow the countdown to LHC startup at this link. It is scheduled to begin running on September 10. Of course, months or years of data collection will be required before any new physics can be seen with confidence.

Have a great week,
Tom

Monday, August 18, 2008

Here We Go



I'm not quite sure why I started this blog - we'll just see where it goes from here. For now, here's a picture of our cat, Zeke:

I'm a (geo)physicist, and I'm sure a lot of this blog will consist of my thoughts on, and links to, current research in physics and cosmology.


That's all for now,

Tom