9th December 2009
Egg Race II
Six teams battled with each other for the coveted ‘Mars’ bars in the annual Egg Race. The challenge for them was to construct a tower at least 1 metre high to hold up a marble. They were provided with straws, sellotape, a paper cup, wooden splints, and plasticine in order to achieve this.
The structure was to be free standing, and only one team, ‘Eggheads’ achieved this. However they had used unauthorized materials (paper! ) as an integral part of their structure. They were not alone in this and the team with the tallest tower of 1.49m, ‘Ping Pong’ had to be discounted for the same reason. The judges had a very difficult decision to make as there were several ingenious designs. However they all infringed the rules in some way.
In the end the first prize was given to ‘The Runners’ , whose aesthetic use of materials just edged out the enterprise of the team from The Gryphon School, also known as ‘One Wheel short of a Unicycle’.
However there were other challenges for the intrepid egg-racers, consisting of Brainteasers and devilish Maths puzzles. In this case the winners of the fruit jelly snake were the Allstars. .
It was all good fun and marked the end of a very successful year for The Science Café in its first year in their new venue at The Senior Lunch Club.
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25 November 2009
Aspects of Osteoporosis - Dr Simon Rawlinson
THE SILENT KILLER
This is the name given to Osteoporosis, by the medical
profession, we were told by Dr. Simon Rawlinson at the latest meeting of
Sherborne Science Café. In the
The disease affects women more than men, and particularly those with disability, as exercise involving impact, is particularly important. Apparently, this helps people to retain bone density and keeps the skeleton from going brittle. In fact we were told that in some Old People’s Homes ‘arm wrestling ‘ is a regullar part of the routine !
An old boy of
Foster’s School, Dr Rawlinson , who works in St Mary’s in
We also found out that humans grow a new skeleton gradually taking about 7 years for this each time. Some of the audience admitted to being on their 11th one right now!
28th October 2009
Lasers, light and liquid crystals - Prof Roy Sambles
Isaac
Newton, Thomas Young and Albert Einstein were just three of the great
scientists who were fascinated by light. Prof Roy Sambles, in a talk entitled Lasers, Light and Liquid Crystals, managed
to convey with immense enthusiasm how light and colour raise many interesting
questions. He described some of the properties of light: how it sometimes
behaves like a wave and sometimes like a particle. In a series of
demonstrations he showed some of its more mystifying behaviour including
polarisation, diffraction, refraction and interference.
Castleton Waterwheel - Geoff Ward
This was the message delivered to Sherborne Science Café at their September meeting. Geoff Ward, the custodian of the Castleton Wheel, gave an expert’s view of mehanics and uses of water wheels down the ages. The Romans were using them in Britain 2000 years ago, telling their womenfolk to ” Cease grinding at the mill …..”
So useful were they that by
the 17th. Century there were up to 20000 of them in use. So
many in fact that they were causing problems on the waterways. Their uses
ranged from milling corn, to crushing ore, pumping, and driving machinery such
as spinning looms. In fact The Industrial Revolution could not have started
without them. Made of wood some of them were as much as 60 feet in diameter,
and there were many beautiful designs, as at Belper in Derbyshire with its
horshoe mill. They could be horizontal, vertical, overshot, undershot or
breastshot, as at Castleton.
Built from the stone from the old station, the pumping station at Castleton was built in 1869 and ran for 90 years moving water from the ‘ Oborne Stream ‘ ( R.Yeo ) to the reservoir off Bristol Road. We now have a new wheel at Castleton thanks to Geoff and his team who replaced the old one 3 years ago. We were also told that these wonderful wheels may make a comeback as climate change beckons, although they may take the form of an Archimedes Screw. New volunteers are always welcome to help run the old technology however !
12th August 2009
Galileo 400 - Special Anniversary Meeting
Percy Seymour, from Sherborne Science Café, pointed out that Galileo was the first to use a telescope to show that our Milky Way consisted of a very large number of stars. Two main problems face astronomers who want to study the structure of the Milky Way. The first is that our Sun is one of many millions of stars in the plane of the Milky Way Galaxy, so we are actually embedded in the system which we are trying to study and second, there are tiny dust grains in the plane of the Milky Way which act as an interstellar fog and blot out the most distant parts. In the twentieth century radio astronomy has played a crucial part in understanding our Galaxy, because radio waves are not affected by the interstellar dust grains.
The evening ended with all three speakers answering questions from the audience.
22nd July 2009
Rob Lloyd
Sherborne Science Café celebrated
the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Darwin with an
insightful lecture on the great man, given by Rob Lloyd, formerly Head of
Science at
However Mr Lloyd
did concede that it was
24th June 2009
Fractals
Martin started by defining a fractal as a picture created by a simple set of rules. He showed us a number of examples of intriguing geometric shapes to illustrate his points. One was Sierpinski’s gasket; which consisted of a number of black and white equilateral triangles of increasing sizes – the smaller ones embedded within the larger ones.
In the second half of his talk he discussed some the algebraic principles which gave rise to the shapes shown in the first part of the talk. He also introduced complex numbers and vectors.
At the end of his talk he discussed some the applications of fractals to Brownian motion, the weather, data protection and the shapes of coastlines. There were a few questions from the floor.
27th May 2009
Vitamin D and sunshine
Oliver Gillie
Dr Oliver Gillie advised his audience at the May meeting of Sherborne Science Café to throw away their sun-block, along with most of their clothes - for as long as they could bare it?! Explaining the benefits of Vitamin D, which is made in the skin with the aid of sunlight, he told us that too much skin protection was bad for our health.
He pointed out
that a low levels of Vitamin D were not only linked with Ricketts, but
also :- Osteoporosis, Bowel Cancer, Arthritis, Multiple Sclerosis, Diabetes and
a weakened immune system. This would mean that the advice given by Cancer
Research
His
unconventional message was greeted with some skepticism by the large audience.
However he pointed out that there was much research to support his claim, even
in the BMJ. White skins had evolved from pigmented ones, in response to
low light levels, when Man migrated out of
25th March 2009
What does science tell us about complementary medicine?
Les Rose
The Sherborne Science Café held on the 25th of March saw a lively exploration of Complementary and Alternative Medicine led by Les Rose, a well-known contributor to the Journal of The Institute of Biology.
Les Rose first posed the question, ‘What is evidence?’ he proceeded to
answer this by giving a hierarchy of answers, pointing out that evidence must
be peer reviewed and also repeatable by others for it to have any
value. He came to the conclusion that anecdotal evidence is no basis on
which to market drugs in the NHS. This ‘medicine’ did not go down well with the
supporters of
However the speaker did concede that much more work was needed to be done on the placebo effect and that there is indeed a natural basis for many of our modern drugs. Other treatments such as acupuncture were also discussed and the conclusion was drawn that more controlled studies were needed.
The audience had much food for thought after this dose of scientific debate!
25 February 2009
A field guide to the isotopes
Prof Paul Stevenson
In an interesting talk on the nature and uses of isotopes, Professor Paul Stevenson started by clarifying the relationship between the atom and its nucleus. If the size of an atom were represented by the size of a cathedral, then the nucleus would be no larger than a fly within the cathedral. The nucleus consists of protons and neutrons, but the rest of the atom is made up of electrons orbitals around the nucleus. The number of protons determine the electric charge on the nucleus, which in turn determines the number of electrons in a neutral atom. It is the arrangement of the electrons in shells around the nucleus that determines the chemical properties, but the nuclear characteristics arise from the number of protons and neutrons.
The number of protons determines the element, but elements can exist in different forms called isotopes, depending on the number of neutrons. The physical laws governing the structure and behaviour of the nucleus are highly complex, and Prof Stevenson followed his introduction with a description of examples of some isotopes.
Hydrogen, the lightest element, has 1 proton, but can exist as three relatively common isotopes: hydrogen, deuterium and tritium, with 0, 1 or 2 neutrons respectively. Hydrogen and deuterium are stable, but tritium is unstable, and is radioactive. Water made with deuterium is called heavy water, and is used as a moderator in nuclear rectors to slow down neutrons in nuclear reactions. In most cases the chemical properties of an element are not influenced by the isotopic form. However, heavy water is biologically toxic, unlike ordinary water.
The isotopes of carbon were discussed, and the use of carbon-14 in radioactive dating of materials that had once been living. An excited state of carbon-12 allowed red giant stars to manufacture the heavier chemical elements, via a resonant state first proposed by the astronomer Fred Hoyle. The talk ended with a lively discussion with the audience.
28 January 2009
Finding our way through some of biology's moral mazes
Prof John Bryant
Sherborne Science Café was pleased to welcome Professor John Bryant of
Modern medicine promises much – ‘miracle’ cures, freedom from genetic diseases, repair of damaged or worn-out tissues, infertility treatment – but also raises significant moral concerns. Prof Bryant challenged his large audience by first gently asking them to examine their own ethical choices in life: ‘Do you always keep to the speed limit?’; ‘What makes you keep to the limit if you do?’ Having got the audience thinking he then introduced genetic selection of embryos and the use of embryonic stem cells as topics for further discussion. He illustrated some basic genetic theory regarding DNA and inheritance. We learned that a white human female was closer genetically to a black female than to a white male. Our old friend the puny ‘Y’ chromosome was responsible for this. ‘It may even contain map reading genes,’ he joked.
After describing how the Human Genome Project had led to an understanding of the genetic basis of disease he then discussed the dilemma surrounding the selection of embryos for stem cell research. ‘What are the limits to our use of technology in trying to cure the sick?’ he asked. The work of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority in licensing and monitoring IVF and embryonic research was also mentioned. By the end of the evening the audience was aware of the complexity of the issues and had begun to realise that there are few universally agreed answers to the questions raised. Most moral issues have to be rationalised by the individual rather than The State. Legislation of whatever kind will never please all of the people.