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Pythagorean Devices And Automobile Parts

pythagora

Japan’s national public broadcasting organization NHK is similar to the United Kingdom’s BBC and, to a lesser extent, the United States’s PBS.

NHK broadcasts a cool kids’ show by Masahiko Satō and Masumi Uchino called Pythagora Switch (Pitagora Suitchi, ピタゴラスイッチ). Basically, it’s an educational puppet show for young children. But what makes it awesome are the interstitials between the segments where they show Pythagorean devices (Pitagora Sōchi, ピタゴラ装置) or what we would call Rube Goldberg contraptions. These machines were created by Keio University professor Masahiko Sato from various common household objects. Click here to view the video clip or view the video clip below:

This also reminds me of the commercial that Wieden+Kennedy did for the Honda Motor Company, where a sequence of moving car parts taken from a Honda Accord is shown cascading towards the climax: the display of a fully-assembled Accord vehicle. Click here to view the commercial or click on the image below:

cog

Physics Of Superheroes

James Kakalios is a distinguished professor in the school of physics and astronomy at the University of Minnesota. He created a freshman seminar course that combined his love for physics with his love for comic books and called it, appropriately enough, Everything I Know About Science I Learned from Reading Comic Books.

Because of its popularity with his students, he was inspired to write The Physics of Superheroes. It is a book for the general reader that covers all of the basic concepts in a first-year college physics course in an often humorous fashion and uses comic book superheroes as examples. Among other things, Kakalios uses basic physical principles to show that the Flash must be surrounded by a pocket of air when he runs that enables him to breathe and that gravity must have been 15 times greater on Krypton than it is on Earth. Kakalios refers to Iron Man, Spider-Man, Ant-Man, and the X-Men, among others, to cover concepts such as thermodynamics, electromagnetism, quantum mechanics, and string theory.

He says that he has been reading comic books longer than he has been studying physics.

Nobel Prize 2006

"Prizes to those who, during the preceding year, shall have conferred the greatest benefit to mankind."

“Prizes to those who, during the preceding year, shall have conferred the greatest benefit to mankind.”

The 2006 Nobel Prize awards for chemistry, physiology or medicine, and physics were recently announced as they are every year at around this time.

The Nobel Prize awards were established in 1895 according to the will of Swedish chemist, engineer, and inventor Alfred Nobel and endowed by his estate. Other than the three natural science awards, Alfred also wanted awards for literature and peace. All five Nobel Prizes were first awarded in 1901. In 1968, Sweden’s central bank established and endowed the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for their 300th anniversary. This prize for economics in honor of Alfred Nobel was first awarded the following year.

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences grants the prizes for chemistry and physics (and economics), while the Karolinska Institute grants the prize for physiology or medicine.

The Nobel Prize awards are presented in Stockholm, Sweden (except for the Nobel Peace Prize, which is presented in Oslo, Norway) every year on December 10, which is the anniversary of Alfred Nobel’s death.

The Nobel Prize science medals were designed by Swedish engraver Erik Lindberg in 1902. The Latin inscription on the medals is

Inventas vitam juvat excoluisse per artes

and can be translated as And all who found new arts, to make man’s life more blest or fair. The inscription is from Book 6, line 663 of Vergil’s Aeneid:

And poets, of whom the true-inspired song deserved Apollo’s name;
and all who found new arts, to make man’s life more blest or fair;
(translation by Theodore C. Williams)

For the chemistry and physics medals, Erik Lindberg chose to show Nature being unveiled by the Genius of Science. For the medal for physiology or medicine, Erik chose to show the Genius of Medicine gathering water to quench the thirst of a sick child.

"And all who found new arts, to make man's life more blest or fair"

Chemistry: Genius of Science unveiling Nature

The 2006 Nobel Prize for Chemistry is awarded to Stanford University scientist Roger Kornberg for his studies of the molecular basis of eukaryotic transcription.

"And all who found new arts, to make man's life more blest or fair"

Physiology or Medicine: Genius of Medicine quenching the thirst of the Ill

The 2006 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine is awarded to both Stanford University School of Medicine scientist Andrew Fire and University of Massachusetts Medical School scientist Craig Mello for their discovery of RNA interference, gene silencing by double-stranded RNA.

"And all who found new arts, to make man's life more blest or fair"

Physics: Genius of Science unveiling Nature

The 2006 Nobel Prize for Physics is awarded to both NASA Goddard Space Flight Center scientist John Mather and University of California at Berkeley scientist George Smoot for their discovery of the blackbody form and anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background radiation.