2018-09-29

Pointing the way

Science has traditionally been a men matter.  Nevertheless, this unfair rule was broken by three courageous women who decided study stars and achieved unprecedented results in this field. Her names were Henrietta Swan Leavitt (1868-1921), Cecilia Payne – Gaposchkin (1900 - 1979) and Jocelin Bell (1943-).
Henrietta Swan Leavitt was born in Massachusetts (US) in an important date for her country, the July 4 of 1868. She graduate in a women institution, the Society for the Collegiate Instruction of Women in 1892. Following an interest aroused in her senior year, she became a volunteer assistant in the Harvard Observatory in 1895. Some years after, she was admitted in a women - composed research group directed by Edward C. Pickering with the mission to determine the brightnesses of all measurable stars by photometry. The reason to choose women for this project was double, the work was considered tedious and repetitive, without necessity to have a high degree of intelligence, and the salary was considerably less than men. Henrietta was especially good in her work, and soon advanced from routine work to a position as head of the photographic stellar photometry department. Leavitt’s outstanding achievement was her discovery in 1912 that in a certain class of variable stars, the Cepheid variables, the period of the cycle of fluctuation in brightness is highly regular and is determined by the actual luminosity of the star. If you know the period of a Cepheid you can calculate its actual luminosity, and measuring its luminosity you can calculate the distance to that Cepheid. This discovery leaded to a new method to accurately determine the distances of many Cepheid stars and consequently of the star clusters and galaxies in which they were observed. The most dramatic application was Hubble’s use in 1924 of a Cepheid variable to determine the distance to the great nebula in Andromeda, which was the first distance measurement for a galaxy outside the Milky Way. This measurement changed our concept of the Universe, because we learned that there are millions and millions of different galaxies in the Universe and not only one, our galaxy.
Cecilia Payne – Gaposchkin was born in Wendoven, England, in 1900. She entered the University of Cambridge in 1919. A lecture by astronomer Sir Arthur Eddington on his expedition to the island of Principe that confirmed Einstein’s theory of general relativity inspired her to become an astronomer. Eddington encouraged her ambition, but she felt there were more opportunities for a woman to work in astronomy in the US than in Britain. In 1923 she received a fellowship to study at the Harvard College Observatory in Cambridge. In her Ph.D. thesis (published as Stellar Atmospheres 1925), Payne used the spectral lines of many different elements to establish that the spectral sequence did correspond to quantifiable stellar temperatures, and also determined that stars are composed mostly of hydrogen and helium. However, she was dissuaded from this conclusion by astronomer Henry Norris Russell who thought that stars would have the same composition as Earth, but finally, Russell conceded in 1929 that Payne was correct. Payne received the first Ph.D. in astronomy from Radcliffe College for her thesis, since Harvard did not grant doctoral degrees to women. Some astronomers thought that her thesis was the most brilliant Ph.D. thesis ever written in astronomy.

Jocelin Bell Burnell was born in Northern Ireland in 1943. She studied astrophysics and as a postgraduate student discovered in 1967 a peculiar radio signal from space that tracked across the sky with the stars. She established that the signal was pulsing with great regularity, at a rate of about one pulse every one and third seconds. Temporarily dubbed “Little Green Man 1” the source was identified after several years as a rapidly rating neutron star. That was the first discovered “pulsar”, one of the most interesting objects in the universe, sometimes a previous stage to a black hole. His thesis director was awarded by the Nobel prize for this discovery, but she was never recognized for it.


In my opinion is necessary to recognize these three women because they pointed the way to other scientist women and contributed to our world with knowledge but with justice too.

2018-09-23

El desayuno almuerzo

Esta mañana éramos 14 en la casa para disfrutar el brunch que había preparado mi esposa - varias cazuelas de huevos, tocino, salchicha y vegetales. Había también bageles y una ensalada de fruta. Éramos seis adultos, cinco adolescentes (todos varones) y tres niños. En la conversación de adultos tocamos de todo, desde la venta de casas, pasando por carreras antiguas, hasta dificultades con la educación de hijos. Los adolescentes hicieron sus propias cosas, especializándose en comer, por supesto, y los niños jugaron un partido de ajedrez. La fiesta duró cerca de tres horas, y todos partieron con agradecimientos y estómagos llenos.

2018-09-22

GOOD MEMORY OR BAD MEMORY?

(Picture from thinking.umwblogs.org)


Are you able to retain things that you read or heard easily?  Do you remember what did you eat the day before yesterday?  Do you remember what did you do every day during your last trip?  If you do…..there is good news: you have a good memory!

Let´s go further:  you do not know where you put your keys or glasses, do you?  How about names, dates, addresses, phone numbers or even anniversaries or birthdays? Do you remember them without problems?  Well, if you do not….that means that your memory is not so good!

Of course having a good memory helps to increase your creativity and ability to solve problems, improve your reading comprehension and self-esteem, reducing stress, etc.   It has many benefits for your health.

But don`t worry….it is not all bad news.  Sometimes a bad memory has some advantages too.  “One of the keys to happiness is a bad memory...” states a famous quote.  In some cases it can be a “gift” because you move on through the difficulties easily, not hold grudges and that can help to keep relationships.

But let us come back to the point, there are many tips and exercises to sharpen your mind and boost brain power: give your brain a workout, get enough sleep, do physical exercise, make time for friends, have a laugh, eat a brain boosting diet, do puzzles, follow a schedule, read more, etc.

If you cannot improve your memory, well nobody is perfect….at least you can learn some expressions in English that can help you to show that if you forgot something it was not your intention and that you are doing your best!.  If you add “I am sorry”, that would be much better!! Here we go:

Be on the tip of your tongue: you think you know it and that you will be able to remember it very soon.     The answer is on the tip of my tongue….

Slip your mind: you forget it.   I am so sorry I forgot your birthday, it just slipped my mind.

Your mind goes blank: you cannot remember a particular thing, or you cannot remember anything.   I tried to remember his name, but my mind went completely blank.

Ring a bell: to sound familiar. The name rang a bell, but I could not remember where I had heard before.

Rack your brain:  to think very hard.   I have been racking my brains all day, but I cannot remember her address.

I had more but I forgot them….just kidding!  I think it is enough for today!

Let us go!! Try to remember these expressions and exercise your brain!!  Good luck!

Thanks for reading it!


2018-09-11

THE BIRD AND THE FISH

                                          (Picture by Leslie Anneliese)



A majestic bird with golden plumage landed on a rock in front of the ocean.  A tiny fish poked its head drawn by the beauty of the bird.

With haughtiness the bird began to speak:

B:   Have you ever been in the blue sky?

F: No, I haven't, but I have been in the blue and fascinating ocean full of life and mistery.

B: Have you ever touched the stars?

F: No, I haven't, but I have touched the brightest reefs on earth full of light and color.

B: Have you ever danced on the clouds?

F: No, I haven't, but I have danced over foamy waves following with my fins the rhythm of the sea.

B:  Have you ever flown to the most remote heights?

F: No, I haven't, but I have swum through the dizzying currents reaching the deepest of the ocean.

The bird kept silence.  It understood that that humble fish had a "sky" too: blue, vast, full of misteries, challenging , magnificent and  hearthwarming!  The bird smiled and fluttering it rose to the sky again!



P.S:  There is a "PRESENT PERFECT CHALLENGE" on a site where I practice my writing sometimes.  I wrote this one.  It is short and simple.
I think the members of this blog can do the same in English or in Spanish if they want to.  It must be a short dialogue using the present perfect tense: between people, pets, abstract things...... You can write whatever you want to.....using that tense.
After the "conditional challenge.....I need a rest..

I still have a doubt:  when I speak about the bird and the fish I used "it" and "its"......but I could use "he" and "his" too, right?

Thansk in advance!!

2018-09-10

The English breakfast

In my opinion, the most pleasant thing to do in this life is to have a relaxed breakfast with your family early in the morning. When I was a child, I used to read adventure novels written by Enid Blyton, in particular a collection called “the famous five” (“los cinco” in Spanish). Was in those lectures where I discovered the authentic English breakfast with eggs, beacon, ham, jam of rhubarb or ginger, bread, biscuits, pastry; and all in a white table mounted with brilliant cutlery, and especially without any hurry. English people have been always intelligent. They have invented almost everything really useful; football, tennis, gin tonic, Jane Austen novels, the phone, the computer, internet, the tube and, above all, the English breakfast.

During my childhood, I never had a breakfast in my house. My mother always prepared me a sandwich (but a Spanish sandwich that is very different than an English or American sandwich, with an absolutely different kind of bread) with an orange to eat at the middle of the class. I can remember the special flavour of my class during breakfast, a tremendous melt of orange and “human fragrances”. We used to have our breakfast playing football at the same time in a tiny schoolyard.

Breakfast is the first food of the day, and it deserves all our attention. To start the day with a good breakfast is to start the day well. I’m absolutely convinced that everybody must learn all good things of other countries. In particular, I know we cannot just copy English breakfast, but we can improve it. In Spain we have serious competitors to beacon or jam of ginger. We can prepare a succulent breakfast with jabugo’s jam, omelette with potatoes, all kind of Spanish sausages and, in our case a Catalan invent, the tomato spread breath. And like English people, without any hurry and with all our family. With these ingredients we can become invincible.

2018-09-09

Si + condicional => error

Al repetir un error usando el modo condicional en un frase que empieza con "si", voy a castigarme con algunos ejercicios...

1. Si en realidad me interesara aprender a no usar el condicional, tendría que practicar con oraciones como esta.
2. Si me interesase no repetir el error, debería escribir con la forma correcta.
3. Si me interesa aburrir a los otros socios del blog, esta es un excelente método para hacerlo.

¡Gracias por tu paciencia!

(Si te gustara un reto, trataría de traducir las tres oraciones a inglés).