General musical inspiration, relatively speaking

A century since Einstein’s published his General Theory of Relativity and the launch date of the new track from Diagrams, the artistic moniker of Sheffield-based Sam Genders on which I played a tiny advisory role on a nanoscopic part of the lyrics.

“I’m fascinated by science and had been reading Einstein’s biography on the last European tour,” says Genders. “When I read that the centenary of the theory was approaching I was inspired to write a song to commemorate it.”

Swirling atmospherics reflect the cosmic subject matter, which inspired the track as synthesizers hum and whirl; yet these textures are juxtaposed with Genders' rich, subtle vocal delivery and pastoral horn arrangements. The overall effect is wistful, but cautiously optimistic, drawing parallels between the incomprehensibility of universal matters, and, as Genders puts it, 'the cosmos that we each have inside our heads.

The imagery included in Bates’ animation alludes to these parallel themes, as two figures seek to be reunited as they float through the void. They drift past intricate, intertwining concentric patterns while Genders sings of dancing ‘like two electrons held in the orbit of a radium ion’.

Sciencebase in Emoji

sciencebase-by-emoji

I strongly suspect this bunch of emoji translate into something lewd, rude, crude, insulting…but it was just meant to be a few of my favourite things…so apologies if you speak emoji and are offended :-/

The ubiquitous Sciencebase

social-media-wall
I’ve been on the net in one form or another since January 1989. First web page 1995 and sciencebase.com registered in July 1999. Now where am I? Here, there and everywhere…

Mastodon    Twitter     Facebook     Tumblr     Flickr     Youtube     Vimeo     LinkedIn     BandCamp     Spotify     SoundCloud     ReverbNation     Instagram     Pinterest     About.me     Google+     FineArt     Science Blog     Tech Blog     Music and Photos Blog     “Sciencebase” the book

Social media icons image by Egbert .EGD from Flickr.

Beyond Bernoulli

It was Schrodinger who said the one question he wanted God to answer was that of turbulence…in an imaginary forthcoming popular science book entitled Beyond Bernouilli, the author explains how science will one day predict the behaviour of clouds, smoke, fluid flow and choppy seas…

Winter Warning

winter-warning-paper

Britain’s meteorologists are predicting another winter this year with the likelihood of highly seasonal weather and average temperatures plunging to well into the mean range for the time of year since records began. The warnings forecast clouds, some frost, slippy ice, very slippy black ice, lots of very grey and dull days. There will be a bit of snow that will disrupt the traffic and trains and could get very slushy once the temperature rises due to global warming that week. There might even be some really windy days that will shakes trees everywhere and blow leaves around a lot. The worst case scenario however will have the Bookies running for their hats at the end of the day, obviously, as the meteor office is predicting some intermittent sunny spells one of which will most likely fall on the day after Xmas Eve, that special day Christmas Day when everyone hopes it will snow.

Festival of the Spoken Nerd – Review

You can take it as read that when Festival of the Spoken Nerd comes to Cambridge for two sold out nights on their national tour, with a hashtag #JustForGraphs (sorry #JustForChartsPlotsDiagrams), there are going to be nergasms aplenty and the locus of the evening is going to follow an exponentially hilarious curve. And as guests of lead uke player, physicist and songstress Helen Arney, Mrs Sciencebase and myself had a right good laugh like,and we never once lost the plot.

batman

Needless to say Mrs Sb bought me the teeshirt – the one that is a Venn diagram (or is it an Euler diagram?) exposing the underlying mathematics of an early Blur song, and I grabbed a copy of FOTSN’s last tour on digital versatile disc for Helen, Steve Mould and Matt Parker to sign after the show. Apparently, Matt signs in binary, but I’m afraid the queue to speak to him was asymptotic (or was it tangential?). Either way it was long, so I only got Helen and Steve to (in his words) deface my merch.

connecting-with-the-audience

There are a scattering of dates left on the tour and there are presumably a few seats left to fill, but like I say they sold out two nights in Cambridge, so check their website for listings and don’t miss it! This is part peripatetic science festival, part full-on standup comedy and part (a very big part) ubergeekery of the highest order.

couscous

wicked

Adrenalin – the fun-and-games hormone

Adrenalin. It’s the fun-and-games hormone of limitless cliche, isn’t it? When you feel that adrenalin surge you know you’re in for a bumpy ride. It gets you quivering with excitement, quaking in your boots, turns your legs to jelly, makes your throat as dry as sticks, has you pacing like a caged tiger, jumping around like a cat on a hot tin roof, gets you shaking all over, sends shivers down your backbone, makes you feel hot under the collar, brings you out in a cold sweat, gives you butterflies in your stomach and good vibrations elsewhere, makes your heart skip a beat…

…no time is it more active than when you have to perform in front of a crowd. That’s when adrenalin is both your best friend and your sworn enemy pumping you up so you can get on down. Rehearsing is easy, it’s the best time to make mistakes, anticipation is easy at that point it’s still all in your head. But when you’re plugging in that amp and adjusting that microphone, doing the old 1, 2, buckle-my-shoe at the soundcheck and the crowd (packing out our local pub*) has downed its first collective pint, then that old devil adrenalin gets you up and running, or rather up and strumming.

c5-the-chequers

C5, our ensemble, featuring Jo Livingstone and Andrea Thomson on backing vocals and percussion, Adrian Hillier and myself on acoustic guitars and vocals, Richard Blakesley on lead electric guitar and wah-wah pedal and Roger Brass (of Roger and Jo 2.0 fame) on bass guitar were all hot to trot with a bunch of cover songs – everything from Bowie and The Beatles to Carole King and the Human League by way of George Ezra, Hosier and Joni Mitchell and a few original tunes by Adrian and myself. Usually, we’re totally acoustic, but this time we were wired and wired for sound (using a SmoothHound wireless guitar transmitter to reduce the trip hazards and still get crystal clear reproduction from guitar to PA to audience ears) and, as Mrs Sciencebase adds, it was all about that bass, which aurally and psychologically seems to be the audio element that an ensemble needs to fill out the sound.

Anyway, to those who came along, thanks for turning out on a drizzly school night. I don’t think the pub were quite expecting a full-on gig, but were happy for the hard-drinking crowd (obviously) and have asked us back for a weekend gig some time soon…watch this space.

There is one thing though…adrenalin withdrawal…it leaves you with a smile on your face, exhausted, but unable to sleep, tossing and turning all night and wide awake in the morning pouring out a stream of consciousness into your latest blog post as the only way to shake off the dregs of that nervous energy.

*Last night, the most excellent Chequers pub, 297 High Street, Cottenham, next to the War Memorial, CB24 8QP, where there is ample parking, fine ales and stone-fired pizza) C5 photo by Moira, lasershow by accident.

How to hack your house with Sugru

Now…this is an intriguing package to receive. A compact cardboard box with what appears to be two tennis balls inside and a warning about strong neodymium magnets. There’s also a toothpick, a paperclip, two little squares of Lego, the aforementioned Nd magnets, the tennis balls and a few packets of that most excellent mouldable glue Sugru…oh and booklet entitled “Home hacks made easy: with a little touch of genius” by way of explanation.

sugru-box

Within, there are clues from Jane Ní Dhulchaointigh, the inventor of this wondrous material as to what all those bits and pieces might be used for. She does warn that using Sugru for home hacks can become addictive once you realise how many different applications a small blob of the stuff that sticks to anything and stays stuck has.

How about making a three point wall support from three chunks of Sugru moulded into hooks for your iPad, whether you want to keep it visible but off your workbench, kitchen worktop or desk? Those same hooks might be used for crocks and pots, utensils, scissors, tools, headphones, spatula, NMR tubes, fountain pen, the dog’s lead, coats, anything…and of course you could use a blob of Sugru to stick a conventional metal hook to any wall surface. Think also bathroom fittings without the risky business of drilling tiles.

There are hacks for using Sugru to make wire protectors/strain relievers for your smartphones USB cables etc, which are notoriously easy to break, and how about adding a few tiny blobs to the USB jack on the cable itself to improve grip for when you’re pulling a cable out of a tight space at the back of the computer or TV. One particular company’s proprietary cables are notoriously difficult to get a grip on (I’m thinking specifically the RCA connectors that allow one to connect an iPad to an old TV, for instance).

Sugru-kit

If you have ornaments or other objects that might be prone to scratch a wooden surface on which they find themselves perched periodically, a blob or two of Sugru could save the surface from scratches. Similarly they make excellent rubber feet for toasters, external hard drives, rotary evaporators, docking stations etc. And even door bumpers.

If the woggle has snapped off your zip, make a new one from a piece of Sugru, whether luggage, coat, sleeping bag. You can stick a Nd magnet to any non-magnetic surface with a piece of Sugru and open up a whole range of storage possibilitoies for attaching magnetic objects to non-metal panelled refrigerators or glass-fronted fermentation cabinets, perhaps, or use to magnets one stuck to the surface the other Sugru’ed to a non-magnetic object to allow them to be attached temporarily to each other.

Oh and how about attaching those tennis balls to the inside of the wardrobe with a couple of bits of Sugru and using them to hang your tennis shoes, saving space and keeping stinky sneakers out of sight. I haven’t thought of a good home hack for the toothpick just yet…

More info and perhaps even clues about the toothpick on the Sugru website.

Dropping the mask, Guy Fawkes and Bonfire Night

firework-soundsAs many of you will know some of us Brits have an annual celebration of a terrorist plot foiled during which we let off fireworks and burn an effigy of the alleged protagonist Guy Fawkes on a bonfire, and if it’s a primary school event eat burgers and hotdogs (long gone are the days of toffee apples and buttered baked potatoes of my childhood, sadly).

What a wonderful celebration. It’s surprising that other nations don’t have similar celebrations of the torture and murder of their historical terrorist suspects.

Moreover perennially it’s essential that science journalists trot out the clever chemistry behind the wonderful colourful displays of fireworks that will be spreading their glow tonight across the UK. Occasionally and with greater novelty the sounds, the snaps, crackles, pops and bongs get a mention as in this excellent update from Compound Interest. Then there is that other evergreen story with the conspiracy theory tinge to make your “Anonymous” mask blush, the one about whether or not Catholic Guy Fawkes was actually the guilty party in the 1605 plot to blow up the Houses of Parliament with the Protestant King James I on the throne or whether he was the original fall guy, a bleating scapegoat or merely the hired muscle who carried the barrels of gunpowder.

dave-guy-fawkes-mask

National Civil War Centre in October – Guy Fawkes – just a fall guy?

The BBC in 2014 – Was Guy Fawkes a fall guy?

The Independent in 2013 – Guy Fawkes 2013: From timid testicles to gunpowder plot truthers

Huffington Post 2012 – The truth about Guy Fawkes

CNN 2011 – The distorted story of Guy Fawkes, a Catholic supremacist

John Paul Davis 2010 – Pity for the Guy

Chinese natural product report

In my latest research highlight for ChemistryViews I discuss Chloranthus oldhamii Solms-Laub, a seemingly nondescript plant that nestles in the damp and shadowy places of remote Chinese mountains. It is rarely seen and barely touched by human hands. Now, Jin-Feng Hu of Fudan University in Shanghai and colleagues have extracted several entirely novel natural products from this plant, which they call chlorabietols. These compounds have a certain activity against the protein tyrosine phosphatase, which is linked to Type II diabetes and cancer.

SB-chlorabietols

Professor of Pharmacy Ciddi Veeresham of Kakatiya University, in Warangal India, told me that the works is “excellent, interesting and thought provoking. “This paper could ignite and motivate researchers working in the areas of taxonomy, medicinal chemistry, pharmacology and pharmacognosy. It could lead to novel chemical structural molecules with an interesting pharmacophore that in turn become novel therapeutic molecules for the treatment of various diseases such as diabetes and cancer.” You can read details of this work on the CV site, but Hu told me about his earlier work and the ongoing efforts to preserve endangered plant species and to isolate and test their physiologically active natural products.

Prior to this work, Hu and colleagues investigated another rare Chloranthus species endemic in China, C. sessilifolius K. F. Wu, he told me. “This plant, also barely touched by human hands, is a perennial herb generally growing in damp areas in forests at an altitude of about 1000−1200 m in the Fengqi Mountain areas in the Sichuan Province.” The team isolated fourteen new ent-abietane-type diterpenoids, sessilifols A−N and three related new norditerpenoids were isolated from the whole plant. They determined the absolute configurations by single-crystal Xray diffraction analysis, the modified Mosher’s method, and/or the observed Cotton effects in their electronic circular dichroism spectra.

Hu told me that sessilifols A (1) and B (2) possess an uncommon five-membered carbon ring rearranged by oxidative cleavage of the C-13/C-14 bond in abieta-7,13-diene followed by the formation of a new C−C bond between C-12 and C-14. Sessilifol C (3) is a rare 7,8-seco-9-spiro-fused ent-abietane, whereas sessilifol O (15) represents the first example of a naturally occurring 14-norabietane-type diterpenoid. Among them, sessilifols F (6) and I (9) were found to have remarkable antineuro-inflammatory activities by inhibiting the nitric oxide production in lipopolysaccharide-stimulated murine BV-2 microglial cells, with IC50 values of 8.3 and 7.4 micromolar, respectively. “This study may contribute to further exploration of the therapeutic potential of the ent-abietenes in neurodegenerative and other aging-associated diseases (e.g., Alzheimer’s Disease, AD),” Hu told me. [J. Nat. Prod. 2015, 78, 1635−1646 (http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jnatprod.5b00195)].

“Natural products (NPs) continue to provide a highly productive resource for the discovery and development of new, innovative disease treatments,” he explains. “There is a significant need for new drugs to treat diabetes and AD.” Moreover, based on recent data (PNAS 2013, 110: 16832—16837; 2011, 108: 12943-12848) suggesting that rare and endangered plant species and their associated bacteria/fungal (endophytes) are actively involved drugs in the past, current, and future, the rare and endangered plants have proven to be better sources for drug discovery when compared to other natural sources.

Hu adds that, worldwide, at least 13% of known plant species are endangered or threatened. “The situation is much more serious in China which is one of the richest countries regarding plant biodiversity, ranking third in the world (after Brazil and Colombia) in the number of species,” he says. “There is an urgent need to investigate the rare and endangered plant species endemic to China,” Hu told me. “We would like to launch a new era to systematically identify NPs from those plants in the China Plant Red Data Book,” he adds. Hu’s own group and collaborators are conducting individual projects related to this overall research goal.