Wednesday 9 May 2012

Avengers!

I'm going to come clean here - I have, in fact, been to see this film multiple times since it came out. You'll have to trust me that that is testament to how awesome it is, rather than how desperate I am for excuses to avoid revision.


It is actually more awesome than Kirk thinks he is:




...and that's a pretty high level of awesome.


It was funny, it had snarky banter, it had (pseudo?)science, it had a 'blue stick of destiny', it had LOKI, and a character who, as we learnt in Iron Man 2 actually speaks Latin!!! It basically had everything, including a lack of excessive romance (I'll take banter over romance any day). It was hugely entertaining and I wholeheartedly recommend it - although you might want to watch Iron Man, Iron Man 2, Captain America and Thor before you see it, for character background. 


If you are also now in Avengers-withdrawal - here are some hilarious and cute comics of the characters (this artist is amazing, she also does the Broship of the Ring, X-Men stuff, Harry Potter stuff, Sherlock stuff... I may be a little in love).  

Wednesday 2 May 2012

Physics is also Worth Funding

(Sorry about the delay - life happened.)

I'm not sure what happened to it in the budget, but beforehand the UK government put something in the region of £70 million a year into CERN and, according to my physics teacher, someone did a survey and found that 30% of people think this is a good use of taxpayers' money.

When I first heard this, I thought 'that seems like quite a lot of money being spent on something which is not terrifically useful', but I have now realised two things: for a government it's not that much, and it is useful. I'll explain my u-turn (with the caveat that other people definitely know more about this stuff than me).

Firstly, if we don't put any money into shared facilities like this, then we're going to fall behind areas of research like particle physics and astronomy, which often need pretty massive bits of equipment to test/observe things.

Huzzah! A particle accelerator!
Unless you're Tony Stark and can just build one at home one afternoon. See here for how much he may have had to bend reality to do this.

You have seen Iron Man 2, right?
These areas are some of the most 'wow!', and so important in encouraging children to take an interest in science.

Like Gru in Despicable Me, but hopefully without the career as a supervillain.

Also particle physics has all sorts of medical applications - cancer therapy, diagnostics, biomedical research into the structure of proteins - and makes itself useful in lots of other ways too.

Finally, you can't direct the course of scientific progress. Sure you can choose which research areas to fund, but you can't force breakthroughs to be made, or predict the applications for new discoveries. The most groundbreaking inferences are often serendipitous, so no area should be considered unworthy of investigation.