If you have ever watched a jumbo jet take off you will know what I mean.
Articles from January 2022
Peering through the Hubble Telescope to our distant past
A few weeks ago, astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope said they discovered the most distant object yet observed in the universe — a galaxy 13 billion light-years from Earth.
A Brit bureaucrat enthralled with science
I don’t know if high school kids today read Samuel Pepys’ Diary. Back in the 50s even parochial school students were exposed to bits of the diary — mostly Pepys’ accounts of the Great London Fire of 1666 and the plague.
Nature takes back an island village
The abandoned village of Richmond Hill lies at the end of a forest track here, four miles from the nearest paved road on the swampy back side of the island, away from the white sand beaches and breezy ridges of Exuma Sound.
The scientific law of Que Sera, Sera
In his autobiography, the brilliant physicist John Archibald Wheeler makes this confession of faith: “Whatever can be, is.”
The really amazing things are real
People believe the darnedest things.
Cassini’s slingshot tour
On the evening of February 23, Venus overtook Jupiter in the evening sky. The two planets gleamed together in a pairing of rare closeness. Both fit neatly into the field of a small telescope, with all four of Jupiter’s Galilean moons.
Can’t fight phobia even in paradise
Every paradise has its snake, as Adam and Eve learned to their chagrin.
The quest for the flash
Morning. The sky mostly clear to the far horizon, just a few wisps of cloud far out there over the sea where the sun will soon rise. The air is tinged pink, orange, and yellow, like layers of sugar icing on the turquoise sea.
Mr. Computer tackles the Y2K bug
Dear Mr. Computer, All we hear about these days is the Y2K bug, and how it’s going to cause havoc at the end of this year. What is the bug, and how can I avoid it?