Friday, March 30, 2012

Groundhog Goes to Work


Photograph by Brandon T. Bisceglia.
There is a fenced-in gulley where I work that runs parallel to the parking spaces. This morning, I heard a shuffling noise on one side of my car. I turned the corner and came face-to-face with a groundhog who gave me a curious look and scurried down the embankment.

While the groundhog attempted to bury itself in the brush, I retrieved my camera and crouched to take a picture from afar. By the time I had adjusted the zoom, however, the furry interloper apparently changed its mind about hanging around. Instead, it began heading along the bottom of the gully back toward me.

I thought I was going to lose the shot entirely. Then, just as the groundhog got to the area in front of my car, it rose up on its hind legs and stared me directly in the lens – just long enough for this portrait.

I did not have the chance to ask the groundhog if it was there to apply for a job.

Monday, March 26, 2012

Donation to WNHU Spurs Renovation of Studios

Renovations have begun on WNHU's future talk studio. With the former music library moved, the room will allow enough space for roundtable-style shows and other more elaborate productions.
Photograph by Brandon T. Bisceglia.

The University of New Haven's award-winning radio station will soon be getting an upgrade.

WNHU 88.7 FM has received a $6,000 donation to renovate its studios from Barrett Outdoor Communications, a West Haven-based outdoor advertising company.

Barrett Outdoor Communications owner John Barrett donated the funds after his son, Patrick, became involved with the station, says WNHU General Manager Bryan Lane.

“There's currently only one room for producing,” says Lane. “His (Barrett's) son was getting shut out a lot.”

The station, which is housed in the basement of Maxcy Hall, sold off the bulk of its physical music library several years ago, after digitizing some of its collection. When Lane was hired in January 2009, there were about 20,000 CDs and 5,000 vinyl albums. Most weren't being used anymore, and there was no reason to keep more than a few thousand around.

Reducing the size of the library opened more space to expand other activities. “The only problem was that we didn't have the funds,” says Lane.

Lane says the elder Barrett came to him with the offer after learning about his son's experiences. They began discussing what could be done with the configuration of the studios if the money was available.

With the donation, the station will be able to turn the room that formerly housed the library into a full-fledged talk studio, complete with a table and multiple microphones for guests. What is left of the music library is being relocated to a walk-in closet down the hall.

Other moves will also take place. The Charger Stream studio, for instance, will be taking residence in Lane's own office, which he says is too large for his needs.

The renovations are likely to last throughout the summer.

There are other changes that Lane would like to see for the station over the next few years. His biggest goal is to train more students to take on more production and management responsibilities at the studio.

“This is the fourth crew that I'm employing,” he says. “We're getting closer and closer to having the students run things.”

Aside from simply learning how to do more on their own, Lane says that putting students in charge will give them more opportunities to interact with the wider community.

“There's a perception that WNHU is a community station,” he says, “because we have so many people from outside the university here.”

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Fun in the Sun

A flock of seagulls takes advantage of the warm spring weather Thursday by frolicking in the low tide mud flats of Ash Creek in Fairfield, Conn.

Photograph by Brandon T. Bisceglia.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Experiment Says Neutrinos Obey Speed Limit After All


Photograph by Christophe Delaere. Some rights reserved.

Neutrinos do not travel faster than light, according to the first independent attempt to verify the results of an experiment from 2011 that found the subatomic particles breaking the speed limit of physics.

The new evidence, which comes from an experiment called ICARUS and was published March 15 to the pre-print server arXiv.org, clocked neutrinos at roughly the speed of light and no faster.

ICARUS is located in Gran Sasso, Italy, the same location as the OPERA experiment that found the faster-than-light neutrinos. Both experiments detected pulses of neutrinos being sent from CERN 731 kilometers away.

The team at OPERA in September released controversial findings showing that neutrinos had arrived at their detector 60 nanoseconds earlier than the speed of light would allow. At the time, they were skeptical but could not find any flaws in their experiment despite six months of checking. They asked the wider community for help.

The first major doubts were cast over the OPERA results in February, when the team found two potential sources of error in their equipment. The first was a bad connection from a fiber-optic cable that sends signals from a synchronizing GPS system into the master clock. This error would tend to speed up the timing of the neutrinos, giving results that were too fast.

However, the second source of error involved an internal oscillator that was not properly calibrated and would tend to make the results of the experiment slower than expected.

ICARUS's results are particularly compelling because, except for the detector itself, almost all of the equipment in the experiment are shared with OPERA. The two even shared the same beams of neutrinos; ICARUS is located in the same facility, mere meters away from its rival detector.

The OPERA team is still moving forward with plans to test its earlier results with more measurements of neutrino speeds this spring. ICARUS and two other experiments at Gran Sasso will also make additional measurements.

"Whatever the result, the OPERA experiment has behaved with perfect scientific integrity in opening their measurement to broad scrutiny and inviting independent measurements,” said CERN Research Director Sergio Bertolucci in a press release. “This is how science works.”

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Intelligent Kinetics: God of the Gases



This is a satirical description of an “alternative” to the Kinetic Molecular Theory of gases based on the definition of Intelligent Design given by the anti-evolution group The Discovery Institute. It's meant to demonstrate how a patina of scientific-sounding words can make the most ridiculous idea seem (almost) plausible.

Unlike evolutionary theory, Kinetic Molecular Theory and other well-established theories do not have active campaigns fighting to discredit their validity. Yet from a scientific standpoint, there is no difference: all theories are founded on mountains of evidence and serve as a framework for other discoveries. So, if Intelligent Design is a viable alternative to evolutionary theory, why not apply the same concept elsewhere?

Secular Bernoullians beware: your flimsy materialistic worldview is about to collapse under the weight of the evidence that an intelligent being is actually moving all those particles around!

What is Intelligent Kinetics?

"Intelligent kinetics (IK) refers to a scientific research program as well as a community of scientists, philosophers and other scholars who seek evidence of design in the behavior of molecules in a gas. The theory of intelligent kinetics holds that certain features of the containers and of gases are best explained by an intelligent cause, not an undirected process such as Brownian motion.

"Through the study and analysis of a container’s components, an IK theorist is able to determine whether various gaseous arrangements are the product of chance, natural law, intelligent kinetics, or some combination thereof. Such research is conducted by observing the properties of gases produced when intelligent agents act. IK scientists then seek to find containers which have those same types of gaseous properties which we commonly know come from intelligence.

"Intelligent kinetics has applied these scientific methods to detect design in the velocities of molecules in a container, the complex and specified information content of gaseous particles, the perfectly elastic and perfectly spherical physical architecture of molecular collisions, and the rapid origin of kinetic activity in a container of gas when changes in pressure, volume, or temperature occur."

Q.E.D.

Monday, March 5, 2012

Tips on Arguing: Argument from Authority



If someone told you that alchemy must be a legitimate science because Isaac Newton practiced it, would you start trying to turn lead into gold?

Of course not. Yet that is exactly how the argument from authority works – by replacing logic and evidence with the name of a respected or powerful person.

Whenever your hear such a name used to back up an argument, you should immediately ask yourself two questions:

First, is the named person a relevant expert on the topic? Francis Crick is a legitimate authority on genetics. Oprah Winfrey is not. If, however, you are discussing media entrepreneurship, Winfrey's perspective could offer valuable insights.

Second, does the authority's position make sense? Although Isaac Newton had reasons to believe alchemy might be true in his day, the evidence has since led us to abandon transmutation for modern chemistry. It does not makes sense to practice alchemy based on Newton's stance on the matter.

The inherent caveat of any argument from authority is this: no matter how high on the totem pole a person may be, no matter how much expertise on a subject he or she may have, it is always possible to make mistakes. Even the brightest of us is still only human.

Whenever someone flashes a big name to boost an argument, always be suspicious. Names are only as good as the ideas behind them.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

UNH Developing Plans to Firm Up Networking Access

A newly wired electrical substation. Photograph courtesy of Mark Klimek. Some rights reserved.

In August 2011, Tropical Storm Irene knocked out power to the University of New Haven's campus for days. In October, an unprecedented snowstorm knocked the university's Internet services out for the entire weekend.

Since then, the Office of Information Technology and the Facilities Department have both been developing plans to shore up the university's access to online services.

According to Director of Networking/Systems Operations Greg Bartholomew, UNH learned a valuable lesson from the one-two punch of 2011's storms.

“Just because you haven't had an outage for ten years doesn't mean you won't have one,” he says.

Bartholomew and Associate Vice President of OIT Vincent P. Mangiacapra are looking at a number of different solutions in case of another outage.

The best short-term solution, Mangiacapra says, is to put generator hookups into Echlin and Maxcy halls, the two main sources for the university's data networks.

Director of Facilities Louis Annino agrees. Right now, he says, the only extra source of power for the department is a type of battery-based backup called an Uninterruptible Power Supply, or UPS.

The primary purpose of a UPS, says Annino, is to make sure that a data center has “clean power” - that is, to protect the system from voltage dips.

“Voltage dips happen all the time,” he says. “You see it when the lights in a room dim for a second. It could just be a squirrel or a bird on the power lines, or a tree that touches them. If you filter your power through a UPS, though, you won't see those dips.”

The other function of a UPS is to generate power for enough time to allow a controlled shutdown of a data system if there is an extended loss of outside power. But the UPS can only do this on a scale of minutes - not the hours that an emergency generator can provide.

An emergency generator hookup installed on the exterior of Echlin Hall would give the OIT the ability to rent a generator and have it running within a few hours of an outage, says Annino. However, it would not do much for anyone who had lost power in a different building.

Another plan OIT hopes to implement over the coming months involves moving the web servers and other critical servers to a “safe harbor” in Springfield, Mass. Mangiacapra says the department would probably make the move in incremental steps.

“The first step would be to really plan out how network connectivity will happen in that location,” he says. “Once that's straightened out, we will move our web server there. That will ensure that everyone will still be able to access newhaven.edu as normal from outside the university even if there's a problem here.”

Next, he says, OIT would develop a plan to move a secondary Microsoft Exchange server to the site that will mirror the current on-campus server. “If we do have an issue here it will fail-over to that location for (staff) email,” he says.

After that, OIT would consider doing the same for Blackboard. Mangiacapra is not sure whether the move could include Tegrity, the multimedia platform, because it takes up so much storage space.

Bartholomew says that the maintenance costs after the move would likely only include a $400 monthly charge for electricity. Other costs would be negligible because the Massachusetts site is already used by the Connecticut EducationNetwork, a consortium to which UNH currently belongs.

“We're finalizing the hardware costs now for how much storage we would need to replicate what we have here,” he says.

Bartholomew thinks that the move could begin as early as May, after the equipment has been bought and tested. The process would continue through the summer.

Mangiacapra says that the plan has already been informally finalized, but that he still needs to bring to it to President Steven H. Kaplan and the other administrative officers for their final approval.

“I don't think there will be any opposition to it, because it's not very costly,” he adds.

The move, says Mangiacapra, is becoming especially important because of the growth of online classes as part of UNH's course offerings.

“Someone in another state, another country, another continent is maybe not going to know that we had a snowstorm,” he says.

The Facilities Department and OIT have also begun early discussions for a long-term project that would move the data centers to a centralized location on the main campus. It would be a costly and complicated move. But Annino says that it fits with a larger goal that he has of integrating the campus electrical grid.

The cut-off of power that Echlin experienced in October was a reflection of how UNH has been built up. It began with only two main buildings: Maxcy Hall and the Gate House. As each new building was erected, it was connected to outside power by a single, separate line.

“The buildings are by and large fed directly from the street,” with few exceptions, says Annino.

In the case of the October snowstorm, the separation of these lines meant that even though the rest of UNH's main campus still had power, Echlin remained in the dark. And as long as Echlin remained dark, the rest of the campus had no connectivity to online services.

Annino says he would like to include a dedicated data center in the design of a future building. He would also like to get an electrical substation for the campus and re-feed electricity across the campus, including the data systems, through that. A substation, he says, would take in power from two outside feeds.

“That way,” he says, “if you lose the feed from Campbell Avenue, the alternative feed could handle the load.”

Annino acknowledges that the large scale and cost of these projects means that they probably will take a number of years to implement. However, he says, they are becoming more and more important as UNH expands.

“This is a small but growing campus, and now we're pushing medium-sized,” he adds.