Showing posts with label Star Trek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Star Trek. Show all posts

Friday, February 27, 2015

So Long, Spock

Nimoy, portraying Mr. Spock in fine
23rd-Century threads
R.I.P. Leonard Nimoy, who died today at 83.

I don't usually wax nostalgic on this blog, but I'll break character for Mr. Nimoy. I'm sure many scientists feel the same way - for me, his portrayal of Spock illustrated the best virtues of chemists: Patience. Curiosity. Intrigue. Skepticism. Diligence. Logic.

Capped, of course, with a wry, dry sense of humor.

Thanks for everything, Leonard.

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Bill Gates' Chem Secret

*Update - I see CJ beat me to it!

Buried deep within a recent NY Times Magazine article, a humbling reminder that not all knowledge comes easily to billionaire tech scions:
source: Microsoft
"Without prompting, [Bill Gates] recounted getting a bad grade in an eighth-grade geography course (“They paired me up with a moron, and I realized these people thought I was stupid, and it really pissed me off!”) and the only C-plus he ever received, in organic chemistry, at Harvard (“I’m pretty sure. I’d have to double-check my transcript. I think I never ever got a B ever at Harvard. I got a C-plus, and I got A’s!”)."
I can't help but draw a connecting line to one of my fictional heroes, as ChemBark noted.

O-Chem is hard. I guess I'm lucky it made sense to me.

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Takei's Target Audience

George Takei, an American actor / activist perhaps most famous as "Sulu" from Star Trek, inadvertently let slip a fantastic bit of advice to Terry Gross on Fresh Air (emphasis mine):

Takei: outreach specialist, helmsman
"I've been on speaking tours advocating for equality for the LGBT community. But what we noticed was I was already talking to the converted — either LGBT people or allies — and what we needed to do was reach what I maintain is the decent, fair-minded, vast middle — people who are busy pursuing their lives and don't stop to think about other issues."


Just replace "equality for the LGBT community" with "chemistry for the general public," and you stumble on a very familiar problem in the blogosphere; communication to that "vast middle" is something we ponder every day.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

#ChemMovieCarnival: Closing Credits

Missed 'em? See Day 1, Day 2, or Day 3!

[Cut! That's a Wrap]

The sun's setting on the final day of filming. Champagne flutes float around, and cast and crew celebrate another one "in the can." Who wants to help strike our #ChemMovieCarnival set?

24. Over at Chemtips, Brandon accidentally spills some "Hollywood Acid" on the floor, and watches as it eats all the way into the basement. Beware the Dip! Seriously, though, he give great advice on handling and care when using straight HF. Bonus points for using an Adult Swim cartoon clip to prove a scientific premise.
Movie: Who Framed Roger Rabbit?
TV Shows: Breaking Bad, Robot Chicken

25. In a valiant second effort, Vittorio tells us more about his favorite crime procedural, NCSI. They apparently have a super-cool mass spectrometer capable of labeling individual components - despite them occurring at the wrong masses. "Non-Chemist Ion Spectrometer," indeed!
TV Show: NCIS

26. Speaking of wonder instruments, Jim emailed me a fantastic guest post about James Bond doing drug discovery. In the rain forest. With a "portable GC." Cure for cancer sure to follow...
Movie: Medicine Man

27. ChemBark sends over a favorite clip of Martin Sheen acting presidential, and apparently pulling a one-liner out of his hat for...table salt (N-A-C-L, CJ). Kary Mullis, for the record, was probably LOTS of fun to sit next to, if Paul's memory serves.
TV Show: The West Wing

27a. ChemBark bonus - A show forever welcome on this blog, where an English a French starship captain confesses he flunked O-Chem.
TV Show: Star Trek:TNG

[Update, 4/28] 28. Jeez, Vinylogous! The door had nearly shut, and you had to go post this gem from a long-running NBC sitcom about a struggling paper company. Bonus: eyewash humor!
TV Show: The Office

Thanks to everyone who made this a great carnival! 
As they say, see you at the movies (hopefully with a better scientific advisor).


~Fin~

Monday, April 22, 2013

#ChemMovieCarnival: Act Three

Click here for Part 1 and Part 2

The directors are directing, the editors editing, the key grips gripping, supporting actors supporting, and the best boy...well, whatever he does, he's doing!

17. John of It's the Rheo Thing recaps the extra-fun chemical err....duplicity, in a movie by the same name. Honestly, this might be the first silicone-meets-Hollywood post that doesn't revolve around typical body modifications (it's a hair gel, folks). Bonus points for an accurate assessment of acting talents.
Film: Duplicity

18. For a post where she's (allegedly) avoiding discussing chemistry (or physics!), Renee really captures the teen angst vs. science teacher influence angle. Not to dis Jena Malone, but antiseptics are more than just fancy soap.
Film: Donnie Darko

19. Chemically Cultured primes our minds to the existence of hardtofindium, dalekanium, dilithium, and the new vogue fake element, unobtainum. Tom, I'd really like a copy of that poster!
Films: Avatar, Star Trek, Star Wars, The Core

20. Smells like three things in this post: burning thermite, methylamine, and the start of #RealTimeChem week! At Chemistry Blog, Mark lets the sparks fly, but doesn't seem to have perfected Walter White's lock-picking technique yet.
TV Show: Breaking Bad

21. New blog alert! Tien, of Must Love Science, covers the *cough* physics *cough* of a well-loved SciFi epic. Simulated gravity? There must be an extra-large chunk of dark matter outside each ship, no?
TV Show: Battlestar Galactica

22. Next, another Chemistry Blog stalwart discusses chemistry moments cropping up in his favorite crime drama. Azmanam's doppelganger (Dr. Spencer Reid) encounters some interesting cases, like that one where the bad guy dunks his victims in methanol to preserve their scent. (Bleargh!).
Also, plywood!
TV Show: Criminal Minds

23. Curt wrote this excellent entry, and he writes a pretty good blog, too: Minglingken, Mixing Knowledge. In this post, we have Russell Crowe, a good-guy whistleblowing biochemist, up against the wall of Big Tobacco. I never knew coumarin was used in cigarettes...
Movie: The Insider

Honorable Mentions: Vittorio and Gavin Armstrong sent along these "science-y" pictures from various forensic TV shows:

Assuredly not poly(vinyl acetate)
Show: Dexter
Hey, look, it's nitrogen! At least it's not chicken soup this time...
Show: NCIS
Want to play along? There's still time! Email me at seearroh_AT_gmail, or tweet (@seearroh)

Update 4/22/13 - Added minglingken entry; assigned authorship to Curt (thanks!)

Saturday, April 20, 2013

#ChemMovieCarnival: Take Two!

(Missed the first act? Click here!)

We're on location, tracking down the best (and worst) in cinematic chemistry.
What have our chemists-cum-scriptwriters come up with today?

10. First, Vinylogous over at Not The Lab visits 1971, learning all he can from a snooty science teacher more interested in nitric acid 'wart remover' than proper pedagogy. H-O-H, indeed!
Film: Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory

11. Vulcans bleed green; the Predator's blood glows in the dark. If you've ever wondered why all these aliens circulate such odd visceral hues, ScienceGeist has the explanation. Trimeric copper complexes? Yes, please!
Films: Star Trek, Predator, Avatar, Alien

12. Andre the Chemist storms back into the ring for another round. This time, he considers chemical "Rosetta Stones" - does our scientific notation only make sense to us? And where does the Enterprise store all those extra atoms for the replicator?
TV Show: Star Trek: TNG, Futurama
Film: Contact

13. Superma, err, Stu Cantrill, flies around Earth beyond the speed of light, all the way back to 1983. There, he meets Richard Pryor, who computes the precise elemental make-up of Kryptonite. Who knew there'd be that much dialium? DANGER!
Film: Superman III

14. At Kentucky Chemistry, N. Tesla opines on the oft-utilized plot device of lit cigarettes creating fireballs from gasoline vapors. Please don't try this at home; peer-reviewed pyrolysis research (!) suggests it's pretty tough, and Tesla's home experiments (!!!) seem to corroborate.
Film: Zoolander

15. Next, Trends In Science's Marcel Swart reviews the emotional chemistry found in a personal cinematic favorite. Lead character Tita cooks with some decidedly 'non-traditional' ingredients: catalyic tears, sensual rose petals, and fiery match-heads.
Film: Como Agua Para Chocolate

16. Over at Wired, plucky Deborah Blum picks apart the highly suspect "HCN disfigurement" scene from the recent James Bond flick, much to her son's chagrin. Who knew spies used to carry around poisonous eyeglasses?
Film: Skyfall

It's still not too late...submit those Chem Movie Carnival entries before Monday! Send to seearroh_AT_gmail, or @seearroh on Twitter. Hashtag: #ChemMovieCarnival. See you at the movies!

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Chem Coach Carnival, Day Two

Happy Mole Day, everyone! With all the momentum of a rushing freight train, #ChemCoach Day Two descends upon an unsuspecting public. Could we possibly do better than the seven (7) entries from Day One? Of course! Today's crop truly dispels the notion of scientists as routine-craving critters forever chained to their benches. Read on to find out more...

8. Renee, Analytical Research Chemist, Australian Government. Wow, our first contestant outside the U.S.! Renee blogs at Lost in Scientia. She gives lab tours (!) if you're interested. Renee credits early lab experience with her future career success. The police have apparently used Renee's hood to make meth. Seriously.

9. Leigh, Freelance Science Writer / Roustabout. Leigh blogs at The Bunsen Boerner (pithy!). She's written for Reuters Health, ACS, and landed a coveted AAAS Media Fellowship. Leigh shares lots of great tips to maximize efficiency and spur networking. Her (pleasant) conversational writing style provoked strong responses from a stuffy former academic.

10. Jess, Physical Organic Chemist / Postdoc. Jess (The Chemist) blogs at The Organic Solution. She's still active at the bench, shoots coloured lasers, and is currently "in fellowship application writing hell." She is quite British. Jess almost went down the gold-plated highway to a banking job, but decided to detour to chem: "Who wouldn't want a job where you play with liquid nitrogen?"

11. Steve, Graduate Student / Blogger. Steve blogs at Scientifics. He strongly recommends actual discussion and discourse with fellow lab mates as the key to figuring out chemical problems (Who knew?). Steve fondly recalls that time he took an inadvertent 6N nitric acid bath.

12. Carmen, Science Reporter / Editor. Carmen, like Stu, dabbles in writing at The Haystack, Newscripts, C&EN, and previously at She Blinded Me With Science. Her writing covers orders of magnitude, from 140-character tweets to 1500-word stories. She even came prepared with a pie chart! Carmen advises the burgeoning ranks of young sci-writers to steel themselves for a tough job market. Ask her grandma about 'Eddy.'

13. A post with Star Trek references and one-liners? Must be mine... (lucky #13!)

14. Marc, Self-employed consultant / chemometrician, Salthill Solutions. Marc blogs at Atoms and Numbers. A statistician and programmer at heart, he spends his day analyzing blood samples by "remote" Raman spectroscopy. Never works 9-to-5. Marc previously taught at a school he refers to as "St. FX," where he overcame a "fear" of pushing electrons to conquer o-chem lecturing.

15. Chemjobber, Process Chemist (Shockingly, blogs at Chemjobber). To steal from quote Deborah Blum: "a great portrait of a chemist at work." CJ shares his experiences with bench-to-plant processes, including the joys of being on-call at all hours and the importance of in-process controls. Even if those controls are as simple as...TLC plates.

16. Steve, Senior Director of Biology, start-up. Steve blogs at the eponymous Stevil. Like many kindred spirits here, Steve is pro-internship / anti-jargon (a good combo). He points out the fantastic role that chance, random encounters, and uncertainty play in shaping modern science careers.

17. Glen, medicinal chemist, Lieber Institute. Glen blogs at Just Another Electron Pusher. Like many others here, Glen dispels the notion that anyone in biotech works a "standard day" - his day includes work as Chemical Hygiene Officer, procurement, and equipment repair...on top of designing drugs! His school 'advisor' was the great 'chemist' Bill Pullman (Lone Star!).

18. Chris, Chaired Prof., University of Minnesota. Chris "blogs" on his faculty webpage! (Seriously, though, ask him to share his "lab expectations" letter sometime). Despite his multiple highfalutin titles, he seems like a down-to-earth, approachable guy, possibly a lifetime influence of honorable military service. I'll cop his best line, re: time management: "Anyone facing a 50/50 commitment...prepare yourself for what is actually a 75/75 commitment!"

19. Andrew, Asst. Prof., "small college." Andrew's full entry below:

Your current job.

Assistant Professor at a small college teaching Organic Chemistry

What you do in a standard "work day."

Lecture about 20 students in organic chem, prep lab experiments by cleaning up the lab, making solutions etc. I work with a lot of students one on one in office hours helping with homework problems. I also help my research students in the lab most days and give directions to a work study student (lab assistant).

What kind of schooling / training / experience helped you get there?

B.S. in chemistry and a PhD in chemistry. I had no real job experience but took free teaching courses while I was in graduate school. I skipped a postdoc and searched for college level jobs with no research or grant writing  requirements and applied at all of them.

How does chemistry inform your work?

I teach the basics every day, really and have used my science education to branch out and teach other classes like a science in popular culture course I developed myself.

Finally, a unique, interesting, or funny anecdote about your career*When I interviewed for my job I was describing energy diagrams in organic chemistry and make the comparison between spontaneous reactions and spontaneous human combustion, complete with stick figure drawings of a guy, guy on fire and ashes in a pile. I still go the job!

20. Eva, Health Care Reporter, Bloomberg News. Eva's full entry below:

Your current job.
European health care reporter for Bloomberg News

What you do in a standard "work day."
I write about pharmaceutical companies, and also do some of the basic science writing, mostly papers that appear in European journals. So my day is a combination of finding new stories, reporting the stories I found and writing up my reporting. Some of the finding is done by meeting people at conferences or just for lunch or drinks, and some is reading. Much of that reading is combing through financial releases, news releases or research papers(I love it). The reporting is either done in person or via phone calls. The writing part is based here in my office in Munich, and fueled by Bach and black tea (w/ milk, no sugar, please).

What kind of schooling / training / experience helped you get there?
I have a MS (German Diplom) in chemistry and did quite a bit of work in biochemistry at the Max Planck Institute in Martinsried. I also have a MS in journalism from Columbia's J-School.

How does chemistry inform your work?
I find I rarely need the rafts of name reactions I crammed, but chemistry helps me in a number of different ways. The most obvious is the ability to quickly understand and evaluate new research. I also find researchers will quickly open up and talk to me when they find out a fellow geek is on the phone. Bloomberg is about financial news, and my left-brained self is really helpful to understand abstract concepts.

Finally, a unique, interesting, or funny anecdote about your career
How did I find out I don't have lab hands and decide to go into journalism? Maybe when I almost blew up a lab doing some kind of ill-informed ether distillation.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

More 'Found Molecules'

This week, I've rounded up three examples of "molecules" - one real, two not-so-real - from the world outside the lab.

Source: Wellcome trust
Amino Acid - I watched a YouTube clip of Guardian Neurophilosophy blogger Mo Costandi explaining to the Wellcome trust about why he blogs (Fun Fact: Mo worked as a security guard prior to becoming a science writer). At the end of the video, Wellcome displays a splash card with a mission statement and a ball-and-stick model: hey, it's L-serine! It's always nice to see a correctly-drawn molecule in advertising, especially when they could have picked a neuron, a cell, or a goofy staged picture instead (Watch, as science blogger adds droplets to bright red solution!!!).

Of course, my science spider-sense needs to clarify two very minor points. First: at neutral pH, solitary amino acids usually like to exist as zwitterions, which would mean that the nitrogen (blue) picks up a proton, and the carboxylic acid (red) loses one (COO-). Two: since we're discussing neurology here, I can't help but feel that they might have meant to show neurotransmitter D-serine, the enantiomer (mirror image). Turns out, the body generates D-serine from L-serine in the brain using a specific enzyme, serine racemase.

Found: hanging on the Shell station door
Nitrogen Enhanced Gas - Last month, Shell Oil company released a new generation of its detergent-containing gasoline, designed to protect your engine from "performance-robbing gunk," or carbon deposit buildup on intake valves. Look at their new logo*, pasted all over the station's pumps, doors, and road signs: what the heck is that blue thing? Counting quickly, I'd assume that it's nonane, the 9-carbon cousin of octane, the main component of gasoline. Well, that can't be it, because that doesn't have any nitrogen! Writer Michael McCoy came up against the same such pseudo-scientific "ziggy-zaggy molecule"  in his C&EN article (Chem. Eng. News 2009, 87(14), 20-21).

Digging briefly through the patent lit, I came across US7,901,470B2 (2011), titled simply "Gasoline Additives," and co-written by six Shell Oil engineers. A sampling:
"a hydrocarbyl amine...in the range 155 to 255 as an additive in unleaded gasoline...for reducing injector nozzle fouling...
Looks like we're on the right track. Read a few more 'grafs down, and they mention...dodecylamine. In fact, they say "...found to be particularly effective," which in patent-speak means they should probably add a few more carbons and an amine group onto that sign! On a more serious note, there's a debate brewing over whether such detergents help engines while harming the atmosphere, by producing extra NOx emissions.


Credit:  ST:TNG | Paramount Pictures
Star Trek Set Design - Watching through old episodes of ST:TNG, a tiny detail caught my eye. In the 24th Century, young Wesley Crusher, the oft-misunderstood teen wunderkind, studies such subjects as nano-engineering, quantum physics, and...chemistry? Check out this screen shot from season 3, episode 1; it seems researchers in Stardate 43125.8 are still using the old HGS modeling kit (a personal favorite, btw).

And what structure do we have here? Judging by the color-code, normally, red = O, black = C, white = H, I'd guess a type of dual hyperoxygen**, an oxygen with four connected bonds (oxygen usually likes two bonds, or 3, tops). I've heard of Olah's hypercarbon, so maybe it's a take on that? Perhaps a form of matter we just haven't found yet? More likely, following the example from National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation, set designers simply aren't versed in synthesis.

Dear Hollywood - If you need to vet a structure or formula, do feel free to ask me. Operators with chalkboards and books are standing by!



*Editor's Note: Is that a registered trademark (R) symbol next to the word "nitrogen?" I wasn't aware that element names could be trademarked! Of course, I'll be immediately contacting the Just Like Cooking legal department to file for Argon(TM), Strontium(TM), Niobium(TM), and Roentgenium(TM). Y'all can fight over the rest.
**Bonus Round: Try putting "hyperoxygen" into Google. Mostly homeopathic cures, hyperbaric chambers, and folks who don't know what hydrogen peroxide really is.