Finished the last three The Walking Dead figures. Just the bases to do.

Waiting for new data from NASA Juno latest close approach, still a few hours away...

This is one of my favourite orbit as it captured a view of Ganymede’s shadow on Jupiter’s cloud tops! #perijove40

I’ve zoomed in on the shadow and replayed the scene at the end of this short GIF.

You can watch the full size/HQ Video on Flickr: flic.kr/p/2n6oKoh

#Jupiter #space #spacetodon #astrodon #astronomy
© NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/AndreaLuck

Here’s an idea: let’s call people “people” on the fediverse instead of “users” whenever we can.

Compare:

“There are 42 users on this instance.”

vs

“There are 42 people on this instance.”

Which acknowledges our humanity more?

Language matters. We don’t need to perpetuate mainstream technology’s othering/colonial framing of “us” – designers/developers/other “clever folks” – and “them” – the users (usually one step removed from “dumb user” and usually the ones who get used).

#peopleNotUsers

Interesting fact of the day: The same effect that cuased light in a prism to split up into different colors is what ultimately caused the first transatlantic telegraphic wire in 1858 to fail.

Morse code is transmitted as on-off signals, effectively square waves. Square waves are in fact made up of many different frequencies. Like in a prism different frequencies move at different speeds through a wire. Therefore as the on-off pulses traveled through the transatlantic telegraph wire the signal spread out like it does in a prism and ultimately the pulses would overlap and be indistinguishable.

The effect was so extreme that it took a message of only 98 words (the first message sent) over 67 minutes to send one way and a whopping 16 hours to confirm the message.

Whitehouse, a doctor with little mathematical understanding, thought he could solve the problem by increasing voltage, which we now know was a futile effort. He increased the voltage to the point he managed to short out the cable entirely and made it useless. However Lord Kelvin had already warned of the problem as was ignored and he came up with the law of squares to describe the problem which later was refined to give us the telegraphers equation. The telegraphers equation is still used today to model feedlines in radio transmitters and receivers.

@Science

Have you ever wondered why marshmallow-topped sweet potatoes is a US holiday tradition? Join me on a sweet and sticky deep dive into the history of the most divisive dish at any Thanksgiving table for Inverse's 'Taste of the Holidays' food science series inverse.com/science/candied-sw

Random paper summary. Human interaction with virtual reality: investigating pre-evacuation efficiency in building emergency (Wang, Z. Et al; October 2022).
The paper describes use of a VR simulation to asses people’s reaction to T-3 type alarms and how being engaged in a task delays a person’s response in the pre-evacuation phase. Two experimental conditions, with 30 participants in each: high-engagement task (completing a multiple-choice quiz) and low-engagement task (waiting to be called for an interview). When the alarm sounded during the tasks, 3.3% of those engaged in the low-engagement task continued with the task, while 73.3% of those engaged in the high-engagement tasks continued the task. However, few participants recognised the T-3 alarm as a cue to immediately evacuate (8 out of the 60), and many confused it for feedback from the VR simulation.
link.springer.com/article/10.1 (open access)

Human interaction with virtual reality: investigating pre-evacuation efficiency in building emergency - Virtual Reality

The current manuscript verifies the use of virtual reality (VR)-based methodology as a helpful way to study human behavior during the pre-evacuation period, considering the influence of pre-emergency activity (competitive tasks). Two conditions with different engagement levels (i.e., low and high) were set up, and sixty company workers were distributed across conditions randomly. Five types of evacuation behaviors were defined, and compliance behavior results showed most participants (66.7%) evacuated with the ISO-type evacuation alarm in low engagement condition, whereas only 20% of participants evacuated in high engagement situation. Statistical results confirmed the influence of pre-emergency activity on evacuation efficiency. Open-ended questions summarized three levels of knowledge background that justified the reasons/motivations behind pre-evacuation behaviors. simulator sickness, presence, and usability questionnaires confirmed the variable control between conditions. In summary, the VR-based methodology successfully reproduced evacuation behaviors similar to real situations, with the influence of pre-emergency activity. This study added a step to the efficacy of using VR as a tool to study human behavior during the pre-evacuation period and pointed out the need for the next generation of alarms, which will improve human safety in building emergencies.

link.springer.com

That’s right, it’s #SpaceTalkTuesday time! This week it’s all about ~exoplanetary habitability~

What does habitability really mean? Do we know of any habitable #exoplanets? How will we be able to study them now and in the future?

Follow along for answers to these #science questions and more!

#SciComm #astrophysics

(fair warning, this will be a long thread. the threaded posts are unlisted as a best practice, but you can still boost them)

Looking at DIY miniature wind tunnel plans. I feel like you can't go wrong with plans from NASA (grc.nasa.gov/www/k-12/airplane), but I'm put off by the giant perspex sheet.

Horror themes 

Another batch of The Walking Dead: All Out War miniatures painted. Only three more before I can play the game.

First impressions, seems like cryptocurrency: made by computer scientists to be clever rather than usable.

Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.