Now on ScienceBlogs: Largest Hispanic civil rights group provoked by Obama USDA's disregard for poultry plant workers

Subscribe for $15 to National Geographic Magazine

ScienceBlogs

What We're Talking About Friday, May 18, 2012

Rare Rings of Fire

Unless you want to fry your retinal cells, it's never a good idea to stare at the sun—even if you're hungry. But this Sunday your favorite ball of gas deserves a little extra attention, as an annular eclipse will be visible along a diagonal strip of the United States from the California-Oregon border down to Lubbock, Texas. On Starts With a Bang, Ethan Siegel writes "In the waning hours of the day on May 20th, as Sun descends in the west, the Moon will pass in front of it, creating the first annular eclipse in the United States since 1994!" The new moon will be at its farthest point from Earth only the day before, and unlike a total eclipse when the Moon is nearer the Earth and blocks out the sun completely, an annular eclipse leaves a blinding ring of fire around the edges of the moon (and makes peculiar shadows on Earth). There is still too much sunlight to observe Sunday's eclipse with the naked eye, but if you don't have welding goggles, Ethan will show you how to make a simple pinhole image of the eclipse or put a floppy disk in front of your camera lens to take a photo. And if you live in another part of the world, Ethan's second post will tell you how to see Venus make a rare transit in front of the sun, which happens June 5, 2012 and not again until 2117.

Weekend Diversion: Preparing for May 20th's Annular Eclipse!

Starts With a Bang!March 11, 2012

"First off, I'm going to make sure I have a pinhole camera with me. A pinhole camera is as simple as having a piece of cardboard with a pinhole poked in it and a white screen behind it. As the sunlight passes through the pinhole, the (inverted) image of the Sun's disk gets displayed on the screen in the back.

"If the Sun's disk is partially blocked, then what shows up on the display screen is the eclipsed Sun, completely safe for viewing. There are a number of quality, ultra-low-tech options readily available for your display screen.

"Because the eclipse is happening late in the day -- in the Pacific Time Zone, it starts at about 5:10 PM and ends at around 7:30 PM -- I'll want to make sure I have a clear view to the west, where the Sun will be descending. I am taking no chances, and will be staking out a spot along the coast. With over 200 miles of prime viewing coastline available, I'm even hoping for a little solitude while it happens."

A Feast for your Naked Eyes: Supermoon, Solar Eclipse and Venus Transit!

Starts With a Bang!May 5, 2012

"The next month -- from May 5th to June 5th -- brings three of the most spectacular astronomy sights possible on Earth back-to-back-to-back for skywatchers of all types, without telescopes, binoculars, or any special equipment."

Video

Jill and Cinnamon demonstrate goat milking 101 on Casaubon's Book.

Video

Divers get nose to nose with a sperm whale on Pharyngula.

Video

Many of the moon's craters were formed 4 billion years ago on Greg Laden's Blog.
Advertisement.

In Conversation

“When politicians mockingly list study titles as Flake did, they belittle the extensive thought and effort that agencies and reviewers put into scoring and funding decisions.”

Another member of Congress wants to micromanage research funding

The Pump Handle

Channel Surfing

Life Science

erv

Updates on the past few posts:

Updates on XMRV, The Pill for HIV prevention, crazy politicians talking about HIV, firing people for teaching evolution, and of course, the OKC Thunder

Pharyngula

Friday Cephalopod: Like little flowers

(via Giordano Cipriani) (Also on Sb)...

Evolution for Everyone

The New Atheism and Evolutionary Religious Studies: Clarifying Their Relationship

I have been neglecting my personal blog lately because I have been working to create EVOLUTION: THIS VIEW...

The Life Science Channel RSS Feed

Physical Science

Starts With A Bang

Reverse Terraforming (for Supervillains only)

"The Earth destroys its fools, but the intelligent destroy the Earth."-Khalid ibn al-Walid Usually, when we talk about...

Starts With A Bang

Umm... is this thing on?

"The doctors realized in retrospect that even though most of these dead had also suffered from burns and...

A Few Things Ill Considered

Another Week of GW News, May 12, 2012

Logging the Onset of The Bottleneck Years This weekly posting is brought to you courtesy of H....

The Physical Science Channel RSS Feed

Environment

denialism blog

Is the holocaust denial/climate change denial comparison apt?

Many of the climate change denialist sites have been up in arms by comparisons of climate change denial...

Dynamics of Cats

crack

From vedur.is Map of earthquakes over the last 48 hours in Iceland....

Greg Laden's Blog

Right Wing Coalition to Attack Windmills

... and it is starting to look like they are mainly tilting at windmills, but still: Confidential memo...

The Environment Channel RSS Feed

Humanities & Soc. Sciences

Uncertain Principles

How to Teach Relativity to Your Bay Area Dog

So, you find yourself living in the San Francisco Bay area, and you maybe have a dog who...

Uncertain Principles

The Story of the Three Hippopotamuses

Tell me a story. Tell me the story about the three hippopotamuses. Ummm... OK. Once upon a time,...

Aardvarchaeology

Recent Archaeomags

At the Late Roman cemetery of Lankhills at Winchester, stable isotope analyses are advancing an old question of where in the Empire certain of its inhabitants came from.

The Social Sciences Channel RSS Feed

Education

Greg Laden's Blog

Teaching After The Test: An argument for a national school schedule

First, a word about Nazis and Free Speech, and other matters: Catch up on the latest news about...

The Weizmann Wave

Math by Mail: Going Strong at 30

It's not about the score, but about stretching the mind and learning to think in different ways.

Greg Laden's Blog

Settling Conflicts: Guns and Homeschooling

There was a time when I blogged regularly about homeschooling, though I have not done so in a...

The Education Channel RSS Feed

Politics

EvolutionBlog

O'Donnell States it Plain

When MSNBC fired Keith Olbermann and replaced him with Lawrence O'Donnell, I was a bit annoyed. But now...

Uncertain Principles

The Republican Brain by Chris Mooney

This has been out for a little while now, and Chris has been promoting it very heavily, and...

Deltoid

Tim Curtin's incompetence with basic statistics

Tim Curtin's incompetence with basic statistics is the stuff of legend. Curtin has now demonstrated incompetence at a...

The Politics Channel RSS Feed

Medicine & Health

Respectful Insolence

In which Orac basks in the adoration of an antivaccine fan...

I'm sometimes asked why I do this. Why, people ask me, do I spend so much time generating...

Respectful Insolence

The (not so) Thinking Moms' (D)evolution continues apace

About a week ago, I took note of what appears to be a new offshoot of the antivaccine...

Respectful Insolence

Now there's some "anti-science"...

I'm sometimes criticized for referring to various people who are "anti-science" as, well, "anti-science." People, for whatever reason,...

The Medicine & Health Channel RSS Feed

Brain & Behavior

EvolutionBlog

More Chess!

The World Championship continues to be a snooze. Five games down, five draws. Only one game has made...

EvolutionBlog

Chess Update

We're two games down in the big World Chess Championship. The challenger is Boris Gelfand of Israel, squaring...

EvolutionBlog

A Big Month for Chess Fans

For anyone who likes chess, the next few weeks are going to be very good indeed. The United...

The Brain & Behavior Channel RSS Feed

Technology

Greg Laden's Blog

Nonsensical Icons: Why is there a "V" on top of my television!?!?

Scott Hanselman has a post on "old people icons" that don't make sense any more. This is one...

Uncertain Principles

Transitional Technical Difficulties

As mentioned previously, the crack technical team at ScienceBlogs HQ is working on shifting us from our creaky...

Greg Laden's Blog

It is not a Jet Pack, but it is close

The Technology Channel RSS Feed

Information Science

Confessions of a Science Librarian

Around the Web: The stubborn persistence of textbooks, Library e-lending "disruptive" to bookstores and more

Future U: The stubborn persistence of textbooks Daunt: library e-lending "disruptive" to high street A "License to...

Confessions of a Science Librarian

Around the Web: Universities have been taken over by administrators, Scholars should make their ideas accessible and still more on Canadian copyright

Universities have been taken over by administrators Making Our Ideas More Accessible (by blogging, twitter, etc) University Of...

Confessions of a Science Librarian

Around the Web: The ugly underbelly of coder culture, Used-book stores in the digital age and more

The ugly underbelly of coder culture Used-Book Stores in the Digital Age The Massive Open Online Professor Leave...

The Information Science Channel RSS Feed

Jobs

Confessions of a Science Librarian

Reading Diary: Marketing for Scientists by Marc J. Kuchner

It's probably best to start with what Marc J. Kuchner's new book -- Marketing for Scientists: How to...

Greg Laden's Blog

Open Position: Climate Wiki Intern

A small non-profit concerned with climate change is seking a "Climate Wiki Intern" which sounds very interesting. Knowing...

Dean's Corner

Liberate your Shoelaces, Flexagons!

Ads of the World. Can business cards evoke creativity, spark interest? Standard business cards seem outdated, dull,...

The Jobs Channel RSS Feed
Advertisement

ScienceBlogs Super Photos

© 2006-2011 ScienceBlogs LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of ScienceBlogs LLC. All rights reserved.