All posts in category Science
Y Chromosome Struggles to Adapt
Posted by CMStewart on January 13, 2010
https://losthunderlads.com/2010/01/13/y-chromosome-struggles-to-adapt/
Planimals Exist!
Posted by CMStewart on January 12, 2010
https://losthunderlads.com/2010/01/12/planimals-exist/
Cybugs
Posted by CMStewart on December 31, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/12/31/cybugs/
Copernicium
In a comment on the post below, I referred to “Cp” as the chemical symbol of the element #112. It was by reading reports like this one and this one that I got this idea. It turns out that the symbol is actually “Cn.” By way of correction, here’s a YouTube from “The Periodic Table of Videos” about the name “Copernicium.”
And their earlier post about the element and its name:
Posted by acilius on December 11, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/12/11/copernicium/
Project Implicit

implicit.harvard.edu
Posted by CMStewart on November 4, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/11/04/project-implicit/
Ptolemy’s system
The ancients looked at the sky and thought that they could see heavenly bodies rotating around the earth. In the sixth century BC, Anaximander of Miletus theorized that the stars were mounted on the inside of a transparent spherical shell and that the earth was a solid sphere hanging in the center of this shell. The Sun, Moon, and planets would have been mounted on other spherical shells. Anaximander’s theories were often criticized in antiquity, but his idea of revolving concentric spheres would dominate the western cosmological imagination for millenia.
Anaximander’s theory explained the apparent movements of the Sun and Moon tolerably well, but the orbits of the planets presented it with a challenge. In particular, if we look at Mars and think of it as revolving around the earth, we will occasionally see it stop, back up, and make a loop in the sky. The astronomer Hipparchus of Nicaea in the third century BC and the theorist Claudius Ptolemy in the second century AD were among those who developed a new theory, according to which the stars and other heavenly bodies moved as if they were mounted on transparent spheres, but spheres that were mounted on other spheres. So the major sphere might make a cycle around the earth, but each heavenly body seemed to be mounted on a minor sphere that made a cycle (an “epicycle”) around a point on that major cycle. A very clear animated illustration of Ptolemy’s epicyclic system can be found here. Here are some more illustrations of this Ptolemaic system:
with descriptions:
From an old edition of Ptolemy’s Almagest:
Below is a video showing how these systems of illustration might represent one hypothetically possible orbit.
Posted by acilius on October 28, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/10/28/ptolemys-system/
Fun with Stats
I love this but I wish it was about my stats friend SPSS. Oh and of course, they should have taken the God’s name in vain part out. I don’t know why most rappers think rap can’t be clean.
Posted by believer1 on October 22, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/10/22/fun-with-stats/
A planet where apes evolved from men?
Posted by acilius on October 2, 2009
https://losthunderlads.com/2009/10/02/a-planet-where-apes-evolved-from-men/






