Showing posts with label Tom Linardos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Linardos. Show all posts

Thursday, November 10, 2011

The 5th 'Hip Hop' Element: Sound Science Emceeing = mc²

While it is accurate to say that 'rap' is 'hip-hop' it is not entirely accurate to say that 'hip-hop' is 'rap' because hip-hop is more of a cultural movement that has intercepted urban communities in recent years.

Hip-Hop or 'rapping' is also known as Emceeing, spitting bars or 'chanting rhyming lyrics'.

Copyright © 2011 Tomitheos Photography - All Rights Reserved

This flowing word content of the rap art form can be broken down into three different components:

(a) rhyme
(b) rhythm
and (c) delivery.

Rapping is distinct from spoken word poetry in that its delivery is performed in time to a beat.

However, even though rapping is a primary ingredient in hip-hop music, excerpts of the poetic word content of rap can be delivered without a beat or any music accompaniment.

There are four elements of Hip-Hop:

(1) Tagging (graffiti art)
(2) B-boying (break dancing)
(3) Emceeing (MCing)
(4) Rapping (poetic lyrics)

Most recently there be may be a 5th element incorporated to this list of hip-hop elements:

(5) Sound Science
(improving memory with rhyming word association).

When students expressed that they find Science subjects like Chemistry and Biology difficult to memorize, Educators looked at other courses students were good at, like Shakespeare, Poetry & Creative Composition and collectively concluded that the 'story telling' incorporated in these courses was serving as a 'mental marker' which helped the brain remember the summary of the subject.

As a result, hip-hop based 'Sound Science' programs are being introduced to young students whereby the students have to create a rap with scientific words as a means in helping them remember difficult definitions by stimulating the memory center of their brain with rhyme.

This modern hip-hop based collaboration makes the approach to Science more fun and current which may help encourage students to foster a new zeal when it comes to choosing science-based courses in school.

Sound Science hip-hop inspired teaching method approaches for chemistry and biology may also inspire new ways of reaching out and connecting with the young urban art student.

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Six or Three Degrees of Separation?


Contacts and Influences:
It's a smaller world today and with all the online social networks along with an ever-growing populous, the alleged six degrees of separation may be shrinking to three degrees..
For example my friend Steve plays saxophone, his niece Debra Cox is an amazing singer, she moved to LA to make it big, Debra signed with Whitney Houston's manager and became an award-winning R&B artist.

Above: me with Nicole Holness singer / co-host of MTV Live
Copyright © 2011 Tomitheos Photography - All Rights Reserved

MTV Live co-host Nicole Holness (featured pic) is related to Debra Cox who is then related to my friend Steve which concludes a 'three' degrees of separation theory.

To clearly understand this theory we must look at the history:

The phrase 'six degrees of separation' refers to the notion that everyone is approximately six steps away from any person on Earth by way of introduction. If true then we are inexplicably intertwined in a web of friends whereby one can connect us to any two people in the world in six steps or less. This friend of a friend acquaintance chain was originally set out by 1929 short story author Frigyes Karinthy and later popularized by playwright John Guare and Will Smith's 1993 movie.

Six degrees of separation is basically the relationship links that occur in quantitative social structures which develop from a direct result of the evolution of these relationships that intercept our social groups and organizations. Michael Gurevich conducted seminal work in his empirical study of social structure and the fractal signature these networks design, this trail or rather these sets of trails was later referred to as 'Sociometry'.

Mathematician Manfred Kochen, an urban design Austrian Statist, extrapolated these sociometry empirical results in a mathematical manuscript: 'Contacts and Influences' where he concluded that in a North American population two individuals can almost certainly contact one another by means of at least two intermediaries.

Perhaps today, in an internet based social structure, one individual can infinitely bridge over to the whole world's population thus foreshadowing a more realistic 'three degrees of separation' scenario as predicted in the findings by American psychologist Stanley Milgram.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Stroke of Genius - Drawing from Memory

A Man of Both Worlds:
___ 'Leonardo Da Vinci bridged the gap between Art and Science.'

Copyright © 2011 Tomitheos Photography - All Rights Reserved

Leonardo da Vinci's was very controversial in his time but today his art as well as his scientific observations, his inventions, and interesting facts about his life make him nothing less than a genius which, in return, have earned him a permanent place in our history.


Art in History:

In the Middle Ages 'the artist' had an immutable purpose to his life accompanied by an obligation to his society to serve the gift of divinity. This was because Art was nothing more nor less than a representation of the World of God, and the artist, the medium through which this Universe becomes visible. Therefore the artist, like God was a creator: a manufacturer of physical things of beauty from thought, and the artist was a well respected 'craftsperson' that was perceived at a much higher level than a blacksmith or a shoemaker that also had important roles in societies of that time.

As we analyze an artist's talent we come to understand that the greatest gift to an artist is visual memory with the talent to convey and replicate that on a physical medium. To understand this one must understand how neuron networks store and retrieve memories, how synapse molecules change to define a network path and, hence, how information flows through the brain to the extremities like the hand and fingers.


How Memory Works:

Information flows from the outside physical world through our sight, hearing smelling, tasting and touch sensors. Memory is simply the way we store and recall things we have sensed.

Recalling memories sparks many of the same neural paths we originally used to sense the experience and, therefore, almost re-creates the event. For an artist, the key is to articulate that imagery with detailed dexterity.

Our brain will store, for fractions of a second, sensory information in areas located throughout the cortex. Then some data moves into short-term memory. Finally, some of that information goes in long-term storage in various parts of the cortex, much of it returning to the sensory cortex areas where we originally received it.

Only the data that catches our attention, like a red light while driving or an important street name, will go into short-term memory. We can hold short-term data for about a half minute.

We use the hippocampus to consolidate new memories. An event creates temporary links among cortex neurons. For example, in seeing a red apple the color 'red' will get stored in the visual area of the cortex, and the sound of eating a red apple gets stored in the auditory area. When a new fact is remembered like 'fresh apple,' the new memory data converges on the hippocampus, which then sends the information along a path several times over to strengthen the links.

Perhaps that is why artists tend to draw and paint multi colored fruit on a tabletop setting, because in their fruitful simplicity, fruit can be the ideal drawing exercise of how the brain can remember a familiar color and its associated shape.


The Science of Drawing:

The memory information follows a path which is called the 'Papez Circuit' which starts at the hippocampus and then circulates through more of the limbic system which in return evokes emotion in the brain. For an artist, emotion would allow for inspiration to set in which in return can physically manifest into an art form. Inspiration is key in motivating an artistic individual to draw-out the thought and/or memory that is in mind onto a blank canvas, thus in conclusion, creating a visually artful masterpiece.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Vitruvian Man - achieving the perfect proportions of the human anatomy

The body is a flow of energies and the greatest harmony in the anatomically correct human form is the symmetrical relations of the extremities to the general magnitude of the body as a whole.



After some research I compiled some basic rules that should make drawing the human body proportions easier.


Copyright © 2011 Tomitheos Art & Photography - All Rights Reserved


These drawing rules for proportions are based on an aesthetically pleasing ideal and not on the proportions of the average person.


Charcoal drawing: STEP 1


The Head:
(a) If you where to draw a line horizontally across the head center and vertically down the center, the first thing you would notice is that the horizontal line goes between the eyes.
(b) The width between the middle of the eyes is the same as the distance as the outer edge to the temple looking from the front profile perspective of the face.
(c) The top of the ear aligns with the eye brow and the ear lobe under or between the nostrils and the upper lip.
(d) The bottom of nose is half way between the eye center line and the chin bone.
(e) The lips are half way between the lower nostrils and the chin bone although for the average human the lips are nearer to the nose than the chin.
(f) The back base of the head where the spine connects aligns to the nostrils.


Painting process: STEP 2


The Body:
The ideal body should be 7 to 8 head lengths from tip of head to the feet.
(1) The already drawn head can be used to counts as one head length:
(2) Chin to nipple height.
(3) Nipple to belly button.
(4) Belly button to groin.
(5) Groin to lower thigh.
(6) Lower thigh to under the knee.
(7) Low knee to upper ankle.
(8) Upper ankle to foot base.


"Artwork is considered good when it provokes thought..
..but also when it becomes a fraction of the reality it represents
and then transforms into a persistent tangible illusion of it." ~Tomitheos


The Body is a Temple

'In the members of a temple there ought to be the greatest harmony in the symmetrical relations of the different parts to the general magnitude of the whole. Then again, in the human body the central point is naturally the navel. For if a man can be placed flat on his back, with his hands and feet extended, and a pair of compasses centered at his navel, the fingers and toes of his two hands and feet will touch the circumference of a circle described therefrom. And just as the human body yields a circular outline, so too a square figure may be found from it. For if we measure the distance from the soles of the feet to the top of the head, and then apply that measure to the outstretched arms, the breadth is found to be
the same as the height, as in the case of plane surfaces which are completely square.'

Marcus Vitruvius, De Architectura, Book III, Chapter 1, page 3

Monday, July 19, 2010

Body Heat and Thermal Energy Power




" Did you know that our natural body heat can be used to power our mobile devices..? "


Copyright © 2010 Tomitheos Thermal Cam Photography
- All Rights Reserved.

The human core body temperature can produce about 100 microwatts of thermal energy!

Science research proves that the human body as a warm object (at 98.6 degrees fahrenheit) is also a capable source of energy that can be harnessed to power a cell phone, a pacemaker or any other battery operated device.

This idea is loosely based on the static electricity theory whereby one can prolong an alkaline battery by rubbing it in their hands, but in this technology the kinetic energy and the actual rubbing of the hands is the source scientists are tapping into and as a result new technologies are aiming to replace batteries by harnessing the use of an individual's own body heat as a source to power biomedical devices like pacemakers and heart-rate monitors.

The normal core body temperature of a normal healthy adult at rest is stated to be at 98.6 degrees fahrenheit (or 37.0 degrees celsius, or 310 kelvin).

Our body temperature is fairly consistent but varies slightly due to metabolism whereby the temperature is lower in the early morning due to sleep and rest and higher at night from food intake and the use of the muscles from routine daily physical activity.

This body-generated thermal energy can produce about 100 microwatts, but researchers are developing an apparatus and microchip that may be able to amplify the charge, store or serve as thermal control in order to drive a microelectronic device.

The new chip design incorporates circuits that work at a voltage level much lower than usual as well as extending the operationg duration of portable devices on a single battery charge, it is hoped that the energy-efficient microchip may be efficient enough to run implantable medical devices using ambient energy from the human body heat as its power source.

Today with the widespread use of mobile devices, the development of new cellular technologies seem to have triggered more research in the field of muscle tissue heat generation during exercise so that non-evasive low voltage personal electronic devices for music and cell phones can be used with a smarter, more efficient and eco-friendly source of power: our own bodies.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

How to make garden patio lighting for free














© Copyright 2010 Tomitheos Photography - All Rights Reserved

"You can make dozens of garden and patio lamps at no cost!"

Deter bugs and save on decor items for your next outdoor party by beautifying your yard, garden and patio with joyful charming color and light.

Supplies for this project are free at stores and simple or easy to find,
some reusable items can be obtained from your own recycling bin.


WHAT YOU NEED:

* paint can wooden stir-sticks
* corks from wine bottles
* empty clear plastic pop bottles
* empty yellow plastic yogurt cups
* glue, tape or spray adhesive
* outdoor Christmas lights
- or you can buy up to 50 led lights for under $20 at madscience.com


HERE IS HOW:

STEP 1
Decorate the the empty yellow yogurt cup with pin holes and adhere like a hat on each empty clear plastic pop bottle.
note: I recommend the color yellow so that the lantern will act as a bug light to deter garden insects but you can use multiple colors for festive events or parties, I also prefer a round spherical pop bottle so that the appearance is aesthetically realistic to the store purchased designs.


STEP 2
Use the tip of a pencil to make a hole an inch below the tip of the paint can stir sticks then drill a hole or punch a hole so you can string the lights and mount the clear plastic bottle that will act as a light bulb.
note: if the hole is too big, the lights will slip out so it is better to make the hole small and enlarge as needed.

STEP 3
Secure the distance of the bottle from the stick by slicing the cork in the desired length and use it as a washer.


STEP 4
Make sure the light are working before assembly, string though the hole on the stick before adhering the plastic bottle with its yogurt cup hat.


STEP 5
As you string your assembled lights across the garden, place each one in the ground with the plug end of the string of lights towards the direction of the outlet and allow the wire to nestle on the landscape between plants for camouflage.
note: you can mimic this assembly design and alter it accordingly for overhead hanging patio lanterns by just omitting the ground sticks.

‹(•¿•)›

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Pringles Planetarium

The Canadian Humble space telescope is the world's smallest space telescope measuring at about the diameter of a pie plate and is packed in the MOST microsatellite which has the size and mass of a carry-on suitcase.

As a fun Science project, you can make your own world's smallest space telescope!

You can create a planetarium projector and space telescope with interchangeable star chart slides for your room.

© Copyright 2010 Tomitheos Photography, All Rights Reserved.

What you need:

transparent paper for tracing
black construction paper
Maxwell house coffee can cylinder
Pringles chips cylinder can
a collection of Pringles lids
star constellation for Pringels lids: space wall star chart graphics
star chart template for Maxwell house lid: large lid star graphics
a pin
a nail and hammer
scissors
led flashlight
laser pointer


Step 1. How to make your own Pringles space chart telescope:

Click here: space wall star chart graphics to access the star constellation template and trace all the points on the transparent sheet of paper. Using a pin poke thru the transparent sheet of paper transferring the constellation design with holes on the black construction sheet of paper. Using the transparent Pringles lids that you have collected, cut out exact circular templates from the completed construction paper, cut slowly and precisely and insert to each Pringles lid, carefully trim the paper borders for a perfect inset fit to the lid. Using your nail and hammer, punch a hole big enough to look through on the adjacent metallic end side of the Pringles cylinder (be sure there are no sharp ends, to ensure this punch it from the outside inwards).

You can now look thru the interchangeable lids with star constellations to recognize and identify them in the real night sky to get more out of your star gazing or on your own planetarium projector - see Step 2 below.


Step 2. How to make your own Maxwell House cylinder can planetarium:

Click here: large lid star graphics to access the Maxwell House star constellation template for your lid and trace all the points on the transparent sheet of paper. Using a pin poke thru the transparent sheet of paper transferring the constellation design with holes on the black construction sheet of paper. Cut out an exact circular template from the completed construction paper with star constellation holes, cut slowly and precisely and insert to the large blue Maxwell House lid, carefully trim the paper borders for a perfect inset fit to the large plastic lid. This time, use the pin to poke the holes right through the large blue plastic Maxwell House lid transferring the same holes from the paper to the large plastic lid. Insert the led flashlight inside the empty can facing up by having a flashlight that can be made to stand upright (glue in place if necessary).


In a darkened room, turn on the flashlight, place it in the Maxwell House can, put the planetarium cylinder on the floor and place the plastic lid with holes on in order to project your constellations onto the ceiling.

By using your laser pointer, you can quiz your friends or family to see if they can identify the different constellations.

Use the Pringles telescope lid slides to match and find where the constellation are located on the projected ceiling star map to get more out of your planetarium game.

The Maxwell House planetarium projection cylinder can be stripped-off of its label and showcased as a hi-tech looking silver cylinder.

The Pringles' space telescope can be decorated with a space drawing or with a paper size print of Van Gogh's famous 'Starry Night' artwork, simply wrap it around the perimeter of the long cylinder and tape it.

Your space telescope with interchangeable star slide constellations and planetarium are now complete.

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Cryopreservation - the freezing fountain of youth is under fire


The word cryobiology is derived from the Greek words 'cryo' meaning 'cold', 'bios' meaning 'life' and 'logos' meaning 'study of' or 'science'.

Today cryobiology is a tangible branch of biology that studies the effects of living things in extreme below freezing temperatures.


Behind the frozen veneer of cryobiology life extension innovation
© Copyright 2010 Tomitheos Photo Graphics - All Rights Reserved

There are many distinctions in the cryo-science practice and the freezing of non-living matter, but in cryobiology the main focus is in the study of preserving life in biological matter including proteins, cells, tissues, organs and organisms in their entirety.

The freezing temperatures in cryo-science may range from very cold, sub zero, hypothermic conditions to extreme temperatures of –300 °C.

As a result of the below freezing temperature measurement studies, scientists created a new temperature scale from the commonly known Fahrenheit and Celsius, which they call the Kelvin and Rankine scales: whereas –300 °C or –508 °F translates to -27 K (conversion calculator)

The field of research in cryobiology techniques, evolved procedures and emerging technologies is primarily focused on trying to achieve cryopreservation suspension and reanimation. In recent years, with support of emergency medicine, the basis that cryobiology may surpass organ transplantation and may have the ability to increase the length of a life may be slowly becoming a reality. However, behind the frozen veneer of life extension innovation lies the very cause of the opposition. The progressing cryobiology research of cheating death and extending the human lifeline is also the same reason for fueling a heated ethical debate with a strong opposition on the morality of cryo-science.

Many medical procedures today would not even be possible if it had not been for cryobiology. The newly evolved medical procedures in the cryobiology field have been successful in treating certain skin tissues from lesions, sustaining cell life and also improved quality of life with various new cryosurgery transplantation processes. Thus in essence, cryobiology is in fact already extending life. The ability to lengthen a person's life allowed many groups to surface as societies pursuing, funding and supporting cryonic suspension of humans. However, the belief that the length of life should not be tampered triggered other opposing parties hindering the research and the science of cryobiology altogether.

In addition to the ethics of meddling with mother nature and as cryobiology is being further explored, the complications of these processes are also becoming well known. Another supporting argument from the opposition to the science that is starting to surface is that any type of cryobiological procedure affects the cells and the surrounding areas causing, in many cases, extensive irreversible damage. In cryosurgery, the reported damage is almost equal to the success of the treatment for the problem. This damage on the cellular level can cause future problems that will require treatment producing a cryo-dependency cycle for the patient.

Damage may also occur in cryopreservation suspension where defects have been known to be caused by implications; the exact underlined cause is still unknown to the science. The cost of most cryobiological procedures is still very expensive and unless a payment plan similar to life insurance can be implemented, the price tag for prolonging one's life with cryobiology is too expensive for the average person to afford. The fact that there are not any successful resuscitations recorded for cryonics patients demonstrates the probability that the damage factor occurrence may be preventing reanimation of a frozen human being and to date it is still not possible.

While there is much controversy about whether cryobiology advancement is scientifically or ethically justifiable, it does offer the possibility of redefining mortality. As a result, several societies for cryobiology based on the life preservation theory have surfaced around the world through the years with members that date back to as early as 1964.

With the many important medical contributions of cryobiology being promoted in the field of organ transplantation and the high expectation of cryopreservation as a future technology, medical research may be the governing force in the cryobiology science that can sway the argument in favor of pursuing the research further despite the current set-backs

Sunday, December 27, 2009

How to make New Year's resolutions work for you!

Every year millions of people commence new work out regiments, alter their diets and make ritualistic changes in bad behavior just in time for New Year's Day.



Studies show that guilty feelings from holiday spending, prolonged lack of exercise and overindulgence with festive treats leads to a guilt-ridden need for change.


© Copyright 2009-2010 Tomitheos Photography - All Rights Reserved.

These feelings seem to coincide with the beginning of the New Year marking a psychological timeline to start fresh with the underlined goal of becoming a better person in the future, inside and out. However, by the first week of February most New Year's resolutions are a distant memory for most..

So how does one make the leap to a new beginning work for them?

The shift for change may be a difficult one but psychologists claim that with a few pointers, success is possible.

Firstly, something to watch for is that most people fail in their attempt for change because the human mind will rationalize with excuses that are rooted deep inside individualistic psyches so that the physical discomfort can end.

Learn how to overcome this obstacle before you even get started by examining your motivation for change. Be realistic and be vocal to your friends and family about the changes you are ready to make so that they can support you, stay away from negative people that would like to see you fail at least until you are confident in your success and strong in your lifestyle change.

Make your tasks non-negotiable and do not rationalize with yourself, for example do not rationalize that it is too early to get up for exercise, yet if it was a work related obligation it would be a non-issue. Do it regardless of how you feel about it, be aware that one can almost always find an excuse not to do something. However, if you make a non-negotiable decision that is based on a sound realistic goal you set in the first place rather than on how you feel at the moment, you will be successful.

Write down your goals, studies show that University graduates have a higher success rate of accomplishing their career goals if they had written them down. Because of our educational system's training of reading and writing, the brain retains the information better and has a better memory when the time is taken to write it down. Focus on the positive changes as a result of your behavioral shift, for example with quitting smoking, focus on the improved breathing, a smoker feels bodily sensations when the nicotine levels drop but it is a choice as to how this symptom is interpreted: symptoms can be defined as extremely unpleasant and curable by reverting back to smoking or alternatively they can be interpreted as the physical discomfort of being permanently cleansed from the drug.

Do not quit your program for change for a minor set back. If you give in to temptation, do not further the damage by using this as an excuse to abandon the whole program. Allow yourself to be imperfect, perhaps you can make it a secondary goal to learn from your mistakes and move on as this will undoubtedly ensure your success.

Start now! If you are waiting for a better time to start a behavioral change, that in itself is a behavioral change that needs to be addressed. Procrastination means it likely will not happen. It is almost never convenient to change mentally fused habits. But your need for change is the mind's own cry for help that is usually heard very late in the game. Now is just as convenient as any time. Plan your resolution(s) in advance, instead of waiting until New Year's Eve.

If you begin today rather than later, you will have a better chance of maintaining your goal and sustaining your discipline in the new year. If you cannot find a reliable friend for support at your times of weakness, use a simple CD related to your goal that will talk you through your temporary set-back and you will find success in whatever you set your mind to.

Best of L.U.C.K. (Labor Under Correct Knowledge); successfully accomplishing your goals is not by chance, it is a Science.

Remember To:

Have a strong commitment for change.
Write down a program that will help to achieve your goal(s).
Have a coping strategy to deal with set-backs that will come up.
Tell your friends, the more monitoring and feedback you have the better you will do.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Science of Sex versus Love







© Copyright 2009 Tomitheos All Rights Reserved.

Is it is chance love or cold hard sex?

Science is proving that love, very much like sex, is in fact scientifically measurable:

The human brain looking for a compatible mate is predominately guided by the natural human evolutional cycle and this may remain a never changing constant in our psyche. Humans don't just mate with anyone, the human brain has a lot to do with the distinction of the overpowering passion for lustful sex and the potent emotion of romantic love.

The fact that both sexes of the intelligent human race want sex and love is well known but there is a third underlined notion in human sexuality that keeps it all together and it is usually camouflaged in law or disguised with cultural traditions: marriage (monogamous attachment). The natural urge to reproduce and populate the earth almost has no place in today's overpopulated planet making the quest for a monogamous relationship with a mate more complex and intertwined with social status, health, physical appearance and overall likability.

In the first beginning stages of attraction, it is believed, and often publicly displayed in society, that males are 'visually aroused' and that females are 'personality and character inclined'. Even though modern society has somewhat changed the mating ritual rules with the passing of time, and continues to do so, one thing is certain in the quest to psycho analyze sexual behavior: the basis of attraction still stems from a primitive urge to reproduce. The need to create healthy offspring and all the social conditions people perceive as normal may simply be a cumulative evolution from this innate instinct embedded in the wiring of the human behavioral brain. In psychology experiments with children, beauty (the basis of attraction) was defined with balanced facial symmetry and also body measurements seemed to play a crucial role in defining someone as pretty or handsome. In studies with adult men, the balanced size ratio of a waist and breasts ranked very high in the preferability choice where in studies with adult women a deep voice and broad shoulders were popular factors of finding someone attractive.

The statistical data supports scientific research that the hormonal development of the female body promotes features that males find favorable in their quest to reproduce; women whose oestrogen hormones helped produce pronounced hips and breast also physically have the likelihood of bearing healthy children and the ability to provide ample breast milk to feed them. Men whose testosterone have favored them with a masculine voice and muscular physiques statistically have stronger immune systems that promotes them to their females counterparts as a wise choice for a mate with a promise of a plausible ability to give them healthy strong children.

For this reason the human body is determined by hormones making the human physique, in essence, an upright walking billboard for reproductive sex but it doesn't stop there, scientists conducted several experiments on University student athletes to determine if the smell of a mate also plays a contributing factor. It was determined that on a subconscious level, the human nose can detect compatible genes and even body symmetry simply by the scent of another which may explain the mysterious physical attraction to someone. The research shows that as the nose is trying to decipher the airborne molecules exuding from sweaty armpit glands (pheromones) the deciphering brain sparks its own coded signals to attract the sought out partner thus making an innate histocompatibility connection (a distinct realization of having the same or similar sets of genes) whereas the human brain plays an integral role in the evolutionary quest for the perfect mate.

So this may explain the sexual attraction of a mate but what holds the relationship together, can science explain love?

As the logical brain settles its neurotransmitters produced in sexual arousal and orgasm between two lovers, it is believed that a need for a bond is also triggered like a secondary evolutionary sense that ensures more of the same pleasurable experience. Theories vary that it is manifested in the need to cuddle after love making or when offspring are born the need to help raise them creating an unbreakable family bond based on fondness. This emotion acts like a reward and stimulates the same part of the brain chemistry in needing or wanting something similar to an appetite, hunger or addiction.

The romantic love chemicals that overwhelm the human brain and even trigger the human physiology all seem to serve the purpose of the continuation of the human species. These chemicals may even alter accordingly to encourage lust to turn into sex and evolve into love.

In conclusion, the human reproduction process may be very intoxicating. The next time you are out for drinks looking for the perfect mate, even though the alcohol may be to blame for releasing the natural sexual urges you are feeling and for increasing your social confidence.. remember that ultimately it is the 'hormonal cocktail' in the human brain that will determine the one you fall in love with.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Intensive exercise may be bad for your lungs




Respiratory pandemics set off several new trends..
Photography by Tomitheos©

'It is believed that in the winter there is nothing like sports and exercise to improve your health and breathing.. yet this advice may be wrong as it is recently being proven that intensive exercise may be bad for your lungs; many top Oylympic athletes' health statistics are showing there is no longer any doubt that an alarming proportion of athletes with rigorous cold-air training end up having problems with their breathing' (Science Daily)

With the winter Olympics in Vancouver Canada merging with many countries worldwide the potential for a problem is already becoming a concern as the pandemic H1N1 influenza surges with the onset of a cold winter, the nations of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union appear particularly vulnerable to a new black lung virus surfacing in the Ukraine, according to their government statistics, 1.5 million of its 46 million people have had diagnoses of the new flu and related respiratory sicknesses since the start of the outbreak. In scientific studies conducted by the Olympic Committee of Colorado (USA) were able to show that over a quarter of the athletes on the American team suffered from spasmodic contractions of the bronchi (bronchospasms) and these respiratory problems appeared more among cross-country skiers.

Physical activity is more likely to cause asthmatic type illnesses in winter because air temperature plays a crucial role. Cold air is also saturated with vapor therefore major water and heat loss occurs through the heavier breathing required by the athlete's activity. In a temperate environment of 27° Celsius the air breathed by an athlete undergoing intensive training is gently warmed as it enters the airways but when ice-cold air is breathed in the air inhaled (due to increased concentration of ionic components in the fluids of the airway mucosa) a mediator release occurs from certain cells in the respiratory tract resulting in airway inflammation.

Sporting a designer face mask in public that covers the nose and mouth may be one possible measure that may also become a new feature in our modern society. Surgical quality masks are designed to protect against airborne contaminants where hand washing only deters from germs from surfaces that were touched. In the case of cold air hindering breathing, a health mask can be altered accordingly whereas air exhaled at a temperature of 37°C enters a hollow metal grid where it can be momentarily encapsulated which will then help raise the temperature of the air breathed in thereby relieving the possible damage from the cold air and coinciding vulnerability from foreign contagious agents.

Other solutions may include anti-viral vaccinations supplemented with an inclusive anti-inflammatory prophylactic drug treatment (steroid-based remedies often given to asthmatics) whereas the steroid may effectively block the bronchial constriction and the vaccine may prevent the onset of severe respiratory flu symptoms.

Virologists investigating transmission say beware of cross-country skiing, the cold dry weather conditions pull moisture out of droplets released by coughs and sneezes which allows the virus to linger in the air making viral contamination worse in the winter. The lung experts warn against undertaking winter endurance training as nasal passages dry out making transmission more likely vulnerable and subject to viral related respiratory infections triggered by the H1N1 swine flu virus or lung respiratory type of illnesses like the one that is starting to recently surface in Europe.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Eucalyptus Martini - Alternative Medicine


Eucalyptus tea made from the leaves' oil is a powerful cough medicine and used as preventive medicine.
Photography by Tomitheos©

Did you know of the Eucalyptus Martini?

The Eucalyptus Martini cocktail is the creation of Humberto Marques, mixologist at Oloroso is Edinburgh, Scotland. Using eucalyptus syrup from the flower herb oil makes the drink refreshing in its sweetness.

Tomitheos' Floating Flower Purple Petals Drink:
Using my own Herbs and Spices in the Cocktail Mixology, I've created my own concoction with a unique recipe using Tanqueray Gin (believed to be the purest alcohol) and by adding the following ingredients:

in every 75 ml Tanqueray Gin add..
30 ml homemade eucalyptus syrup
15 ml lime juice
Cinnamon Stick
and Crushed Ice


Preparation:
Pour the ingredients into a cocktail shaker with the crushed ice.
Shake well.
Double strain into a large martini glass.
Garnish with cinnamon stick and floating eucalyptus flower or leaf.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Color Psychology or Eye Spectrum Discrimination?



The Psychology of how color relates to the body and mind outlines that a growing child's brain is stimulated more by the black and white contrast than that of any color.

Therefore, for optimal brain stimulus results, a brightly colored newborn baby's room may need a 'black and white' geometric infusion integrated in the design!

Photography by Tomitheos©

However, colors also play an important role in the human brain's healthy development. Sir Isaac Newton demonstrated that light travels in waves, when he shone white light through a triangular prism the different wavelengths refracted at different angles, enabling him to see the colors of the rainbow (the spectrum).

When light strikes any colored object, the object will absorb only the wavelengths that exactly match its own atomic structure and reflect the rest - which is what we see. In essence, we don't see the object but rather the light reflecting off of it.

As light enters the human eye, the wavelengths do so in different ways ultimately influencing our perceptions; in the eye's retina they are converted into electrical impulses that pass to the hypothalamus (the part of the brain governing our hormones and our endocrine system).

The color blue is the color of our bright sky and vast oceans, because of this it is embedded in our psyche to experience serenity at the sight of the color blue. Studies show that depression follows when we lack seeing the color blue for extended periods of time.

As we interact in our color speckled modern world, although we are unaware of it, our eyes and our bodies are constantly adapting to these wavelengths of light and being influenced by them on a subconscious level.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

NASA approves Hubble Space revival plan


Photography by Tomitheos©


Updated 4:44 p.m. ET, Wed., Oct. 15, 2008:
Circuit switchover could get data flowing again by Friday, managers say...

NASA is going ahead with a plan to restart the flow of science data from the Hubble Space Telescope by routing around circuitry that failed a little more than two weeks ago, officials said Tuesday.

The unprecedented switchover is due to begin early Wednesday, and if all goes well, the telescope should be beaming imagery back down to Earth by Friday, said Art Whipple, manager of the Hubble Space Telescope Systems Management Office at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.

Last month's glitch forced the postponement of the shuttle Atlantis' servicing mission to the world's best-known space observatory. That mission had been due for launch on Tuesday, but it's now been put off until next February at the earliest. Whipple said the plan for that orbital service call was "still being hashed out."

The operation planned for this week will be done entirely by remote control, from Hubble's operations center on the Goddard campus in Maryland. Controllers will switch Hubble's command and data handling system from the channel it was using, known as Side A, to a backup channel called Side B.

Whipple said NASA's experts were confident that Side A was the source of the glitch that cut off the flow of science data. "As far as we can tell, nothing else was affected," he told journalists during a teleconference Tuesday.

Over the past couple of weeks, teams at Goddard have been testing a spare data-handling unit and checking diagnostics from the telescope to make sure the plan for the switchover was solid. The electronic components on Side B have never been used before during Hubble's 18 years of operation, and it's not certain that they will work this time.

"It is a complicated procedure, and it's one that we have not done end to end before," Whipple said. But he said experts determined that even under the worst-case scenario — for example, if there were a hidden flaw in the Side B electronics — the telescope would not be left in worse shape than it is now.

In order to do the switchover, controllers at Goddard will have to put the telescope into safe mode, issue commands to reroute circuitry through Side B rather than Side A, then return the telescope to its operating condition.

"This is something that is a little out of the norm of what you would do around the house, but it's probably not unlike what an IT professional might do with an office network," Whipple said.

"The difference is, on the ground, you tend to power things on and off and reconfigure by pushing buttons and swapping cables," he said. "Since we can't do that, of course, with something in space, there are ... switches that do the functional equivalent of swapping cables, and remotely commanded relays that allow us to send a command and power something on or off."


MSNBC Science editor Alan Boyle said that In all, 40 to 50 people will be involved in the operation. "People will be working 24/7 for the total time here," said Jon Morse, director of the Astrophysics Division in NASA Headquarters' Science Mission Directorate.

The most critical time in the switchover will last from about 8:30 to 11 a.m. ET Wednesday, Whipple said. If the recovery is successful, the first data should be received from one science instrument late Thursday, with full operation restored on Friday, he said.

The very first image is due to show an internal lamp that is part of the apparatus for Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys, which is currently inoperative due to an earlier glitch.

"Nothing could be aesthetically less pleasing," Whipple said, "but it will be a great relief to everyone when we see that flat field illuminated by that internal lamp."

Hubble's managers expect that the first science instrument to be revived would be the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2, which has produced some of the telescope's most famous images in the visible-light spectrum. Another imaging device, the Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer, could come back into service later.

The big upgrade for the telescope, involving the installation of two new instruments and the hoped-for repair of two others, will have to wait until Atlantis gets off the ground. NASA would also send up the spare command and data-handling unit for installation as a replacement part, assuming that the unit passes its ground testing. The telescope would continue to use Side B on the replacement unit, Whipple said.

He said experts may not know exactly why Side A on the current unit suddenly went bad until the apparatus is brought back down to Earth for analysis. But he wouldn't rule out a diagnosis that the normal wear and tear experienced during 18 years of use led to the breakdown.

Whippie closed by saying: "Unfortunately, nothing lasts forever."

Life as we know it..






Photo Creation by Tomitheos©






A team of micro-biologists and chemists are closing in on bringing non-living matter to life.

Harvard biologists may be creating a new form of life by a Frankensteinian resurrection of non-living matter, reanimating it back to life.

The laboratory led by Jack Szostak, a molecular biologist at Harvard Medical School, is building simple cell models that can almost be called life.

Ironically this real life tale parallels to the horror movie DEADGIRL that I reviewed when it exclusively hit the film festival last month:
( DEADGIRL at the Toronto Film Festival )

Szostak's protocells are built from fatty molecules that can trap bits of nucleic acids that contain the source code for replication. Combined with a process that harnesses external energy from the sun or chemical reactions, they could form a self-replicating, evolving system that satisfies the conditions of life, but isn't anything like life on earth now, but might represent life as it began or could exist elsewhere in the universe.

While his latest work remains unpublished, Szostak described preliminary new success in getting protocells with genetic information inside them to replicate at the XV International Conference on the Origin of Lifein Florence, Italy, last week. The replication isn't wholly autonomous, so it's not quite artificial life yet, but it is as close as anyone has ever come to turning chemicals into biological organisms.

"We've made more progress on how the membrane of a protocell could grow and divide," Szostak said in a phone interview. "What we can do now is copy a limited set of simple [genetic] sequences, but we need to be able to copy arbitrary sequences so that sequences could evolve that do something useful."

By doing "something useful" for the cell, these genes would launch the new form of life down the Darwinian evolutionary path similar to the one that our oldest living ancestors must have traveled. Though where selective pressure will lead the new form of life is impossible to know.

"Once we can get a replicating environment, we're hoping to experimentally determine what can evolve under those conditions," said Sheref Mansy, a former member of Szostak's lab and now a chemist at Denver University.

Protocellular work is even more radical than the other field trying to create artifical life: synthetic biology. Even J. Craig Venter's work to build an artificial bacterium with the smallest number of genes necessary to live takes current life forms as a template. Protocell researchers are trying to design a completely novel form of life that humans have never seen and that may never have existed.

Over the summer, Szostak's team published major papers in the journals Nature and the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that go a long way towards showing that this isn't just an idea and that his lab will be the first to create artificial life -- and that it will happen soon.

"His hope is that he'll have a complete self-replicating system in his lab in the near future," said Jeffrey Bada, a University of California San Diego chemist who helped organize the Origin of Life conference.
Modern life is far more complex than the simple systems that Szostak and others are working on, so the protocells don't look anything like the cells that we have in our bodies or Venter's genetically-modified E. coli.

"What we're looking at is the origin of life in one aspect, and the other aspect is life as a small nanomachine on a single cell level," said Hans Ziock, a protocellular researcher at Los Alamos National Laboratory.
Life's function, as a simple nanomachine, is just to use energy to marshal chemicals into making more copies of itself.

"You need to organize yourself in a specific way to be useful," Ziock said. "You take energy from one place and move it to a place where it usually doesn't want to go, so you can actually organize things."

Modern cells accomplish this feat with an immense amount of molecular machinery. In fact, some of the chemical syntheses that simple plants and algae can accomplish far outstrip human technologies. Even the most primitive forms of life possess protein machines that allow them to import nutrients across their complex cell membranes and build the molecules that then carry out the cell's bidding.

Those specialized components would have taken many, many generations to evolve, said Ziock, so the first life would have been much simpler.

What form that simplicity would have taken has been a subject of intense debate among origin of life scientists stretching back to the pioneering work of David Deamer, a professor emeritus at UC-Santa Cruz.

What most researchers agree on is that the very first functioning life would have had three basic components: a container, a way to harvest energy and an information carrier like RNA or another nucleic acid.

Szostak's earlier work has shown that the container probably took the form of a layer of fatty acids that could self-assemble based on their reaction to water (see video). One tip of the acid is hydrophilic, meaning it's attracted to water, while the other tip is hydrophobic.

When researchers put a lot of these molecules together, they circle the wagons against the water and create a closed loop.
These membranes, with the right mix of chemicals, can allow nucleic acids in under some conditions and keep them trapped inside in others.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Our theories on our Universe may be full of holes..



Photo Credit / Graphics by Tomitheos©


Astronomers have claimed to have found an enormous hole in the Universe, nearly a billion light-years across, empty of both normal matter such as stars, galaxies, and gas, and the mysterious, unseen "dark matter." Which has become a questionable presence, while earlier studies have shown holes, or voids, in the large-scale structure of the Universe, this relatively new discovery dwarfs them all.

"Not only has no one ever found a void this big, but we never even expected to find one this size," said Lawrence Rudnick of the University of Minnesota. Rudnick, along with Shea Brown and Liliya R. Williams, also of the University of Minnesota, reported their findings in a paper accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal.

Astronomers have known for years that, on large scales, the Universe has voids largely empty of matter. However, most of these voids are much smaller than the one found by Rudnick and his colleagues. In addition, the number of discovered voids decreases as the size increases.

"What we've found is not normal, based on either observational studies or on computer simulations of the large-scale evolution of the Universe," Williams said.

The astronomers drew their conclusion by studying data from the NRAO VLA Sky Survey (NVSS), a project that imaged the entire sky visible to the Very Large Array (VLA) radio telescope, part of the National Science Foundation's National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO). Their careful study of the NVSS data showed a remarkable drop in the number of galaxies in a region of sky in the constellation Eridanus.

"We already knew there was something different about this spot in the sky," Rudnick said. The region had been dubbed the "WMAP Cold Spot," because it stood out in a map of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) radiation made by the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotopy Probe (WMAP) satellite, launched by NASA in 2001. The CMB, faint radio waves that are the remnant radiation from the Big Bang, is the earliest "baby picture" available of the Universe. Irregularities in the CMB show structures that existed only a few hundred thousand years after the Big Bang.

The WMAP satellite measured temperature differences in the CMB that are only millionths of a degree. The cold region in Eridanus was discovered in 2004.

Astronomers wondered if the cold spot was intrinsic to the CMB, and thus indicated some structure in the very early Universe, or whether it could be caused by something more nearby through which the CMB had to pass on its way to Earth. Finding the dearth of galaxies in that region by studying NVSS data resolved that question.

"Although our surprising results need independent confirmation, the slightly colder temperature of the CMB in this region appears to be caused by a huge hole devoid of nearly all matter roughly 6-10 billion light-years from Earth," Rudnick said.

How does a lack of matter cause a cooler temperature in the Big Bang's remnant radiation as seen from Earth?

Photons of the CMB gain a small amount of energy when they pass through a region of space populated by matter. This effect is caused by the enigmatic "dark energy" that is accelerating the expansion of the Universe. This gain in photon energy makes the CMB appear slightly warmer in that direction. When the photons pass through an empty void, they lose a small amount of energy from this effect, and so the CMB radiation passing through such a region appears cooler.

The acceleration of the Universe's expansion, and thus dark energy, were discovered less than a decade ago. The physical properties of dark energy are unknown, though it is by far the most abundant form of energy in the Universe today. Learning its nature is one of the most fundamental current problems in astrophysics.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Mathematician Claims Black Holes are the Result of Bad Math..



............... Image Credit: Max Camenzindand ....................

Mathematician Stephen J. Crothers seems to be spoiling all my astrophysics solutions! Crothers claims that the equations used to justify the existence of "black holes" are themselves either incorrect (with 3D versus 4D space inconsistencies and inapplicable radius curvatures) thus meaningless, in error and just plain 'wrong' ..


Crothers claims to have mathematically, meticulously and rigorously demonstrated that the math behind black holes has been incorrectly applied and in some cases incorrectly attributed (meaning that the wrong scientists have been given credit for particular valid or invalid mathematical contributions).

Referral: cyber-friend Michael Gmirkin (University of Oregon Graduate) - Plasma Cosmology and the Electric Universe -

Needless to say, Crothers' assertions are rubbing astronomers and astrophysicists the wrong way. However, if Crothers' assertions are accurate, then a vast portion of current astronomy may be predicated upon a patently false concept.

To briefly summarize some of Stephen J. Crothers' research regarding the history of black hole theory, you can review his papers below:


www.sjcrothers.plasmaresources.com

www.sjcrothers.plasmaresources.com/article-1-1.pdf

www.sjcrothers.plasmaresources.com/papers.html

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Science solved the mystery of Levitation

Levitation has been elevated from being pure science fiction to science fact, according to a study reported today by physicists.

In earlier work a team of theoretical physicists showed that invisibility cloaks are feasible..

..now according to a parallel study, levitation has been proven possible.

A Scotland based University of St-Andrews team of physicists has created incredible levitation effects by engineering the force of nature which normally causes objects to stick together.

Professor Ulf Leonhardt and Dr. Thomas Philbin have worked out a way of reversing this phenomenon known as the casimir force, so that it can repel instead of attract.

Their discovery could ultimately lead to frictionless micro-machines with moving parts that levitate but they say that, in principle at least, the same effect could be used to levitate bigger objects too, even a person.

The Casimir force is a consequence of quantum mechanics, the theory that describes the baffling world of atoms and subatomic particles.

The force is due to neither electrical charge or gravity. The fluctuations in energy fields within the intervening empty space between the objects is one reason atoms stick together much like what enables a gecko to walk across a ceiling.

Because the Casimir force causes problems for nanotechnologists, who are trying to build electrical circuits and tiny mechanical devices on silicon chips, the team believes the feat could initially be used to stop tiny objects from sticking to each other.

Professor Leonhardt explained that the Casimir force is the particular cause of friction in some microelectromechanical systems and the ultimate cause of friction in the nano-world thus concluding that the micro or nano machines could run smoother and with less or no friction at all if one can manipulate that force.

Although it is now possible to levitate objects as big as humans, scientists are still a long way off from developing a precise anti-gravity technology.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Human Spaceflights - Space tourism and time travel is a reality


XCOR Aerospace began test firing a fairly new jet design concept, this Methane Rocket Engine is to overcome some of the engineering challenges. This XCOR spacecraft named Lynx is a rocket ship type plane capable of sub-orbital flight to altitudes more than 60 kilometers above the ground.

By definition this rocket engine is to lift the sub-orbital craft to a spaceflight altitude higher than 100 kilometers above sea level.

Sub-orbital tourist flights will initially focus on attaining the altitude required to qualify as 'reaching space.' The take-off flight will be a highly juiced g-force ride, either vertical or very steep and landing very much like a plane or shuttle. The spacecraft will probably shut off its engines well before reaching maximum altitude and then coasting up to its highest point. Those few minutes from where the engines shut off to the point where the atmosphere begins to slow down the downward acceleration, the passengers will experience true 'weightlessness.'

The XCOR Lynx being launched in Mojave California today; the spacecraft is expected to be scheduling regular flights by 2010.

read the full Tomitheos story:

www.nowpublic.com/tech-biz/human-spaceflights-space-tourism-and-time-travel-reality

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Astronauts test handyman robot




Photo Credit / Graphics by Tomitheos© International space station's giant new handyman robot got its first checkup this past Sunday, with astronauts and flight controllers testing its electronics, joints and brakes.
The Canadian-built robot, named Dextre, passed all but one of the tests. One of the wrist joint brakes in Dextre's left arm slipped a tiny bit more than engineers wanted, but Canada's acting space station program manager said he wasn't too concerned. The brakes help hold the arm steady.

"In the long term it's not going to affect the operation of Dextre in any significant way," Pierre Jean said.

Astronauts and flight controllers planned to test the brake a couple more times in hopes that it slips less as it gets more worn in, Jean said.

Two astronauts plan to take a spacewalk Monday night to add a tool holster and other accouterments for Dextre. When the robot is fully assembled, it will stand 12 feet and have a mass of 3,400 pounds.

Dextre — short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter — is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and possibly someday take over some of the tougher chores, like lugging around big replacement parts.

Two astronauts installed Dextre's two 11-foot arms during an overnight spacewalk that lasted into the wee hours of Sunday.

Dextre has seven joints per arm and can pivot at the waist. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs.

Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm. It is also able to ride by itself along the space station arm's railway.

A total of five spacewalks are planned for Endeavour's nearly two-week visit to the space station, the most ever performed during a joint shuttle-station flight.

While some of the astronauts prepared for Monday night's outing, other crew members stowed equipment that was brought to the station aboard the storage compartment segment of Japan's Kibo lab. That will pave the way for the shuttle Discovery to deliver the $1 billion lab in May.

Photography by Tomitheos

www.nowpublic.com/tech-biz/astronauts-test-handyman-robot