Showing posts with label science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science. Show all posts

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Fukushima is not Chernobyl

 Update: 2 very well written Chinese articels

核电站事故FAQ非常浅显版
为什么要发展核电?


The analogy is like iodized salt vs iodine tablet.
  1. Chernobyl exploded to the sky/air, and wind carried the nuclear waste away. There is no chance Fukushima will explode, even in the worse case of a melt-down. The difference between the recommended circle of evacuation we heard, from US vs Japanese guidelines, are 80km vs 20km. an 80km circle is about the size of Hong Kong. So people in Tokyo will be safe, very safe.
  2. The inner steel-concrete is intact. Yes, there is a theoretical possibility that there might be a leak, and risk if temperature will rise. The truth is once such risk arises, cement can be poured in to seal the reactors permanently. Worse case: the 50km radius or so will be no man zone, mainly a a result of radiation level risk -- but a paradise for wildlife.
  3.  (As the New Scientists put it) What is different about the Fukushima Daiichi accident?
    The Chernobyl reactor was actually running – albeit at low power – at the time of the accident there. By contrast the Fukushima Daiichi reactors automatically shut down as soon as they felt the earthquake, by inserting control rods so the nuclear reactions in their cores began slowing within seconds. This means that, from the outset, the amount of heat being produced was much smaller than at Chernobyl. (I should add that Reactor #4, which has been damaged, actually has no fuel rod inside)

Why Fukushima Daiichi won't be another Chernobyl
Six days after the earthquake that rocked Japan and left thousands dead, the nation is now struggling to avert disaster at its Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. Events have moved fast and risks are hard to assess.
The worst nuclear accident in history was the Chernobyl explosion of 1986 in what is now Ukraine. Nuclear experts have repeatedly stated that the Japanese situation cannot get as bad as Chernobyl. New Scientist explains why.
What has happened so far in Japan?
Following Friday's magnitude-9 earthquake off the coast of Japan, the nuclear reactors at Fukushima Daiichi automatically shut down – as they were meant to. However the cooling systems have repeatedly failed, leading the cores of some of the reactors to overheat.
This has led indirectly to explosions damaging both the outer buildings and parts of the containment systems intended to prevent radioactive material from escaping. Because of these breaches, some of that material has got into the atmosphere.
Additionally, ponds containing used fuel rods have been overheating, and could potentially lead to more contamination.
We published a detailed rundown of events so far on 15 March, and you can follow the latest developments on our Short Sharp Science blog.
What happened at Chernobyl?
Staff at the plant were running tests to find out how well they could cope with a temporary shutdown of the reactor's cooling system. The test went wrong and there was a power surge. The staff tried to shut the reactor down, but instead the nuclear reaction accelerated rapidly.
"For a few seconds it was generating thousands of times the normal power output," says Michael Bluck of Imperial College London. The extreme heat from the nuclear reaction triggered an explosion, which blew the roof off both the reactor vessel and the building containing it – exposing the reactor core to the outside world – and sending radioactive material hurtling into the atmosphere.
Fires then started. Most were put out within hours, but the one in the damaged reactor burned for many days, spreading radioactive material still further.
How bad was Chernobyl?
Chernobyl is the only event ever to be given the maximum rating of 7 on theInternational Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale, which measures the severity of nuclear accidents. This means it released a major amount of radioactive material that covered a wide area.
It's too early to say how the Fukushima Daiichi incident will compare. The Japanese authorities provisionally put the event at level 4, a "local accident". Earlier this week, however, the French nuclear agency rated the disaster as at least a level 5 or 6.
What is different about the Fukushima Daiichi accident?
The Chernobyl reactor was actually running – albeit at low power – at the time of the accident there. By contrast the Fukushima Daiichi reactors automatically shut down as soon as they felt the earthquake, by inserting control rods so the nuclear reactions in their cores began slowing within seconds. This means that, from the outset, the amount of heat being produced was much smaller than at Chernobyl.
So why couldn't a runaway reaction happen at Fukushima Daiichi?
The Chernobyl reactor had a fundamentally different design to those at Fukushima Daiichi. Chernobyl ran on unenriched uranium, which is a fairly weak nuclear fuel. In order to use it, the reactor was designed in a way that made it easier for the nuclear reaction to accelerate. This allowed it to generate useful amounts of power, but it also left it vulnerable to running out of control.
Fukushima Daiichi runs on more powerful fuels than Chernobyl did, mostly enriched uranium. In contrast to the Ukrainian reactor, its design minimises the nuclear reaction unless its human operators boost it. "You have to actually try to make it go," Bluck says.
Ordinarily the reactor cores are surrounded by water. Heat from the nuclear reaction boils the water, creating steam that drives turbines which generate electricity. In doing so, the water also helps to cool the reactor.
But crucially, the water is also a "moderator": it helps keep the uranium fission reaction going by slowing down neutrons produced by the reaction as they hurtle out of the fuel rods. Slow neutrons sustain the reaction, by liberating still more neutrons and heat from uranium atoms in the rods; fast-moving neutrons just pass straight through the other fuel rods without colliding with other uranium atoms. If the water heats up too much, however, bubbles form within it and these allow the neutrons to escape, slowing down the nuclear reaction.
Effectively, if the coolant overheats, it starts shutting down the reaction without any human intervention. "It's a brilliant solution," Bluck says.
Nuclear engineers call this a "negative void coefficient", because having voids – bubbles – in the coolant slows down the reaction. By contrast Chernobyl had a positive void coefficient, so the reaction was more likely to accelerate.
Could Fukushima Daiichi catch fire like Chernobyl did?
There have been some small fires on the site, all of which were put out rapidly. In one case the Japanese authorities initially said that one of the spent fuel ponds was itself on fire, but this was later retracted and it remains unclear what actually happened. In another case, the fire has been attributed to diesel engines pumping water into the reactors. All of the fires seem to have been outside the pressure vessels that contain the core of radioactive fuel rods.
At Chernobyl the pressure vessel was breached and the reactor had no containment. There, the core itself burned fiercely, largely because it was made of graphite – which was used as the moderator. This did not make the accident more likely, explains Bluck, but once the reactor exploded the graphite made the situation worse, because it burned so readily. The fires carried radioactive material from the reactor core high into the atmosphere, where it spread far and wide. This could not happen at Fukushima Daiichi, as it does not use graphite as the moderator.
What is the worst-case scenario for Fukushima Daiichi?
It's difficult to be definitive, because information is limited and often confused, and the outcome will depend on the decisions the plant's operators take.
But at the moment the reactors themselves seem to be largely under control and are cooling rapidly. The control rods, which absorb neutrons and dampen down the nuclear reactions, have been in since Friday, and the reactors have been suffused with seawater laced with boric acid – another neutron absorber. Because of the reactors' negative void coefficients, the nuclear reactions cannot now restart unless those actions are reversed. "There is no scope for there to be criticality," Bluck says.
Meltdown would only become possible if, for some inexplicable reason, the operators were to undo all they have done to date to control the reaction.
There have been some leaks of radioactive material and will probably be more, partly because containment systems have been breached, and partly because radioactive steam must be regularly vented to allow more water in.
The biggest threat now seems to be the spent fuel ponds, where the water level has fallen and temperatures have risen. That could lead to the fuel rods breaking open, releasing their radioactive contents.
Bluck is surprised that the ponds are proving so problematic, because unlike the reactor cores they contain no high-pressure steam making it hard to pump in cooling water. The ponds are a standard feature of nuclear facilities, and are typically designed to ensure that nuclear reactions cannot restart in the fuel rods: among other things, the rods should be widely spaced in the pond.
However, the company operating Fukushima Daiichi has now said that, for the fuel pond at reactor 4, "the risk of recriticality is not zero", meaning a nuclear chain reaction could restart in the rods. Quite how this has come about is unclear. But adding boric acid to absorb the neutrons should stop the reaction before it starts.

    Saturday, November 20, 2010

    Map: rare earth ores in the USA

    The US has 13 million tonnes of rare earth elements but it would take years to extract them, suggests the first detailed report on the country's supply.

    Source: USGS
    Via: NewScientist

    Full PDF report here

    A new report finds significant deposits of rare earth elements in 14 states, with the largest known deposits at Mountain Pass, California; Bokan Mountain, Alaska; and the Bear Lodge Mountains, Wyoming. "Placer" deposits are sandy sediments that sometimes contain rare earths. Phosphorite deposits, which mostly occur in the southeastern US, sometimes contain the rare earth elements yttrium and lanthanum (Image: USGS)

    Friday, October 1, 2010

    Rare Earth Elements - what do they look like

    Rare Earth Elements are essentially group IIIB elements in the periodic table. Being in the same group means having similar electronic configuration (in Neils Bohr's orbit paradigm) and hence similar chemical properties.

    The official definition of Rare Earth include only the lighter elements, i.e. the periods (rows) 4-6 of group IIIB, although the 3rd set (period 6) actually contain 15 siblings, the lanthanides. The heaviest IIIB group, the actinides (period 7), which are mostly radioactive elements, are not referred to as "rare earth", though one would expect similar chemical and physical properties, they are unstable.

    Since the chemical properties are very similar (and physical properties such as weight as well for the lanthanides), they are also very hard to be isolated by chemical (and physical) methods. The closeness in electronic configuration also means there are fine tuning in terms of their properties -- which made it easy for scientist to test hypothesis on the material properties, e.g. if one element is found to demonstrate certain property, with some undesirable defect, chances are that the neighboring element may demonstrate the similar property, and with luck, with that defect improved.
    -- one technical detail, the lanthanides all have similar chemical properties despite the fact that the "exterior shell" electron number ranges from 0 to 15, is because this supposedly "exterior shell" got attracted into somewhere deeper, making the 2nd outermost shell the outermost shell.

    The now mostly well known Mountain Pass mine (shut down but will be re-opened) in California is located midway between Los Angeles and Las Vegas on Interstate 15, about 15 miles before the State border at Primm. If you have drove passed that route, you may remember a sharp elevation passing a mountain on the Mojave Desert, that mountain pass is called the "Mountain Pass". Molycorp is located east of the highest elevation (at around 4600 feet) point -- the pass.

    Below shows what they look like (3rd column from left, and 2nd row from below)



    The chart above shows only 16 of the rare earth elements. The one with perhaps the most romantic (or Hellenic indeed) name, Promethium, is missing. Because this is the only element that is radioactive, hence unstable (actually very unstable - 17.7 year half life), and hence had decayed over the years and cannot be found in nature any more.

    The chart below shows some rare earth elements plus some accompanying elements typically also found together in rare earth mines.


    ..and a very informative article by National Geographic.

    Here is the chart of world reserve and production in REE, from fas.org .

    Monday, September 13, 2010

    This is also my view regarding the "global warming" issue

    Finally, there is some real physics. Professor Laughlin said all what I wanted to say.

    A few years ago, I was amused at reading a report that the hundreds of thousands of cattles in the Antelopes Valley in Central California were blames of emitting too much methane via farting, and contributing to the warming of the earth (see, for example this). I was like, what about the six millions of residents in California? Do they fart at all? Do a million people fart less than a hundred thousand cattles? If the grass is not digested by cattles, will they be digested by sheeps, or insects? Do these creature fart? Or will they find another way to manufacture methane? Do they breathe out more CO2 than the effective dosage of methane? This sounds scary, maybe we should remove the grass and turn the area back to desert again, like the Death Valley? But then grass does perform photosynthesis which converts CO2 back to O2 and retain solar energy into chemical format such as sugar and starch, and I know energy is required to restore entropy......

    "Common sense tells us that damaging a thing this old is somewhat easier to imagine than it is to accomplish—like invading Russia." 

    yes, it is common sense physics, nothing as sophisticated as Hawkings physics.

    My personal answer to conservation is simply, I try not to create more entropy unless necessary, which means, keep the non-biodegrable wastes in order, do not waste energy unless needed, etc.

    ===

    What the Earth Knows

    Any serious conversation about the planet’s climate and our energy future must begin, paradoxically, with a backward look at geologic time. The reason for this is that the way forward is fogged by misunderstandings about the earth. Experts are little help in the constant struggle in this conversation to separate myth from reality, because they have the same difficulty, and routinely demonstrate it by talking past each other. Respected scientists warn of imminent energy shortages as geologic fuel supplies run out. Wall Street executives dismiss their predictions as myths and call for more drilling. Environmentalists describe the destruction to the earth from burning coal, oil, and natural gas. Economists ignore them and describe the danger to the earth of failing to burn coal, oil, and natural gas. Geology researchers report fresh findings about what the earth was like millions of years ago. Creationist researchers report fresh findings that the earth didn’t exist millions of years ago. The only way not to get lost in this awful swamp is to review the basics and decide for yourself what you believe and what you don’t.

    Geologic time is such a vast concept that it’s helpful to convert it to something more pedestrian just to get oriented. I like rainfall.
    • The total precipitation that falls on the world in one year is about one meter of rain, the height of a golden retriever.
    • The total amount of rain that has fallen on the world since the industrial revolution began is about 200 meters, the height of Hoover Dam.
    • The amount of rain that has fallen on the world since the time of Moses is enough to fill up all the oceans.
    • The amount of rain that has fallen on the world since the Ice Age ended is enough to fill up all the oceans four times.
    • The amount of rain that has fallen on the world since the dinosaurs died is enough to fill up all the oceans 20,000 times—or the entire volume of the earth three times.
    • The amount of rain that has fallen on the world since coal formed is enough to fill up the earth 15 times.
    • The amount of rain that has fallen on the world since oxygen formed is enough to fill the earth 100 times.
    Common sense tells us that damaging a thing this old is somewhat easier to imagine than it is to accomplish—like invading Russia. The earth has suffered mass volcanic explosions, floods, meteor impacts, mountain formation, and all manner of other abuses greater than anything people could inflict, and it’s still here. It’s a survivor. We don’t know exactly how the earth recovered from these devastations, because the rocks don’t say very much about that, but we do know that it did recover—the proof of it being that we are here.

    Nonetheless, damaging the earth is precisely what’s concerning a lot of responsible people at the moment. Carbon dioxide from the human burning of fossil fuel is building up in the atmosphere at a frightening pace, enough to double the present concentration in a century. This buildup has the potential to raise average temperatures on the earth several degrees centigrade, enough to modify the weather and accelerate melting of the polar ice sheets. Governments around the world have become so alarmed at this prospect that they’ve taken significant, although ineffective, steps to slow the warming. These actions include legislating carbon caps, funding carbon sequestration research, subsidizing alternate energy technologies, and initiating at least one serious international treaty process to balance the necessary economic sacrifices across borders.
    Unfortunately, this concern isn’t reciprocated. On the scales of time relevant to itself, the earth doesn’t care about any of these governments or their legislation. It doesn’t care whether you turn off your air conditioner, refrigerator, and television set. It doesn’t notice when you turn down your thermostat and drive a hybrid car. These actions simply spread the pain over a few centuries, the bat of an eyelash as far as the earth is concerned, and leave the end result exactly the same: all the fossil fuel that used to be in the ground is now in the air, and none is left to burn. The earth plans to dissolve the bulk of this carbon dioxide into its oceans in about a millennium, leaving the concentration in the atmosphere slightly higher than today’s. Over tens of millennia after that, or perhaps hundreds, it will then slowly transfer the excess carbon dioxide into its rocks, eventually returning levels in the sea and air to what they were before humans arrived on the scene. The process will take an eternity from the human perspective, but it will be only a brief instant of geologic time.
    Some details of this particular carbon dioxide scenario are controversial, of course, since all forecasts are partly subjective, including those made by computer. You have to extrapolate from present-day facts and principles, and there are varying opinions about these. The time scale for man-made carbon dioxide to be absorbed by the ocean is set by the mixing rate of surface water with deep water in the sea, which is known only indirectly and might conceivably change during the thousand-year hot spell. The amount of carbon dioxide left in the atmosphere after equilibration varies from tolerable to alarming depending on how much industrial burning the model assumes. No one knows for sure how long it will take the excess carbon dioxide to turn into limestone and disappear into the rocks, or even the specific chemistry involved. The main reason for thinking it will disappear is that something, presumably a geologic regulatory process, fixed the world’s carbon dioxide levels before humans arrived on the scene. Some people argue that carbon dioxide has been locked to these values for millions of years, the grounds of the argument being that the photosynthetic machinery of plants seems optimized to them. But the overall picture of a thousand-year carbon dioxide pulse followed by glacially slow decay back to the precivilization situation is common to most models, even very pessimistic ones.

    Global warming forecasts have the further difficulty that you can’t find much actual global warming in present-day weather observations. In principle, changes in climate should show up in rainfall statistics, hurricane frequency, temperature records, and so forth. As a practical matter they don’t, because weather patterns are dominated by large multi-year events in the oceans, such as the El Niño Southern Oscillation and the North Pacific Gyre Oscillation, which have nothing to do with climate change. In order to test the predictions, you’d have to separate these big effects from subtle, inexorable changes on scales of centuries, and nobody knows how to do that yet.

    Humans can unquestionably do damage persisting for geologic time if you count their contribution to biodiversity loss. A considerable amount of evidence shows that humans are causing what biologists call the “sixth mass extinction,” an allusion to the five previous cases in the fossil record where huge numbers of species died out mysteriously in a flash of geologic time. A popular, and plausible, explanation for the last of these events, the one when the dinosaurs disappeared, is that an asteroid 10 kilometers in diameter, traveling 15 kilometers per second, struck the earth  and exploded with the power of a million 100-megaton hydrogen warheads. The damage that human activity presently inflicts, many say, is comparable to this. Extinctions, unlike carbon dioxide excesses, are permanent. The earth didn’t replace the dinosaurs after they died, notwithstanding the improved weather conditions and 20,000 ages of Moses to make repairs. It just moved on and became something different than it had been before.
    However, carbon dioxide, per se, is not responsible for most of this extinction stress. There are a handful of counterexamples, notably corals, which may be especially sensitive to acidification of the ocean surface, and amphibians, which are declining noticeably for unknown reasons. But, except in these few isolated cases, keeping carbon-based fuels in the ground a while longer won’t make much difference in mitigating the loss of biodiversity. The real problem is human population pressure generally—overharvesting, habitat destruction, pesticide abuse, species invasion, and so forth. Slowing man-made extinctions in a meaningful way would require drastically reducing the world’s human population. That is unlikely to happen.
    It’s a mistake to suspend judgment on questions of population, climate, and carbon use just because they’re sensitive. If you do, you’ll become incapacitated by confusion. Earth scientists tend to be ultraconservative when it comes to the future, presumably because the scientific ethic forbids mixing speculation with fact, and go to extraordinary lengths to prove by means of measurement that the globe is warming now, the ocean is acidifying now, fossil fuel is being exhausted now, and so forth, even though these things are self-evident in geologic time. The unhappy result is more and more data but less and less understanding—a common problem in science but an especially acute problem in climatology. In such situations it’s essential to weigh facts more strongly if they are simple, and use this practice to sweep away confusion whenever you can.
    The sea’s immense capacity to store carbon dioxide is one of the simple things with which you can reliably orient yourself. It’s a junior-high-school science-fair project. Leave a glass of distilled water on the counter overnight, and by the next morning it will have become slightly acid, due to the absorption of carbon dioxide from the air. It hasn’t absorbed much—about the amount stored in an equal volume of air—so this effect alone will not sequester much carbon. But drop a piece of limestone in the water, thereby emulating the presence of carbonate rocks at the bottom of the sea, and you will find the next morning that the water becomes slightly alkaline, and the amount of carbon dissolved in the water is now 60 times greater than it was before. After tinkering a bit to figure out where this carbon came from, you eventually discover that half came from the limestone and half came from the air. It all has to do with the marvelous (and elementary) chemistry of bicarbonate salts. You also find that the alkalinity of the water matches that of seawater, as does the carbon dioxide carrying capacity. Thus we learn that the oceans have dissolved in them, in the form of bicarbonate ion, 40 times more carbon than the atmosphere contains, a total of 30 trillion tons, or 30 times the world’s coal reserves.

    The experiments that assign specific numbers of years to geologic layers are almost as simple as this science-fair project, although not quite, and they are just as reliable. Not everyone agrees with this assessment, of course. Geologic time does contravene certain religious beliefs, a notorious difficulty with the subject that is very regrettable, since it doesn’t contravene the religious beliefs that count. But it’s probably more significant that the experiments, simple though they may be, involve obscure facts about rocks, a knowledge of physical law, and the assumption that this law was the same in the ancient past as it is now. None of this is obvious, much less interesting, to the average person. If you go to the supermarket and engage the checkout clerk in a conversation about the Paleozoic Era, radioactivity, or the disappearance of the megafauna, you’ll be met with a smile, whereupon you’ll probably be escorted from the building as a lunatic. However, the time scales do come from something concrete that can be explained simply.
    You get a long way toward understanding geologic time by just disciplining yourself to use your common sense. A local beach a short drive from my home is backed by cliffs about 100 feet high that expose alternating layers of sandstone, mudstone, and aggregate, perhaps seven layers in all. You can tell without having attended a single geology class that these layers were formed by the action of water, the most likely candidate being the nearby ocean, especially in light of the fossilized clamshells entombed in some of the layers. Yet there they are high and dry, integrated into the rolling hills beyond, as though they were the sliced edge of a huge layer cake. The layers are also tilted, sometimes up and sometimes down, as though giants had sat down upon them in some places but not others. The tilt is large enough that some cliff-top planes continue downward to the beach and disappear into the ground. The cliffs are eroding. The rocks are noticeably crumbly in places, and you can see little landslides high up on the cliff face, and shelves and caves at the bottom where waves wash at high tide.

    Once you begin noticing oddities in the rocks, you can’t help but think about their implications. Layers of rocks with fossilized clams in them can only be above water now if the land rose, the sea sank, or both. Sea level has been quite constant throughout recorded history, say 5,000 years, and there are no documented cases of hundred-foot rises in the land either, except those resulting from volcanoes. So the cliffs are considerably older than recorded history. The tilting tells you that the land moved, regardless of what the sea did. The material forming the layers had to come from somewhere. Erosion from the cliffs themselves is really the only possibility, because there just isn’t enough mud coming down local creeks and rivers to account for the sheer mass of rock, and anyway the layers are grainy and chunky, which the river mud isn’t. But cliffs can’t be made of erosion debris from themselves. The cliffs must therefore have eroded away completely and risen up again at least once, and more likely several times, judging from the layering complexity. The erosion rate of the cliffs thus sets the minimum age of the rocks. This rate appears to the eye of a regular visitor to be about one millimeter per year, perhaps less, for the rock here is relatively hard, so that it would take 100,000 years to erode a kilometer, or about a million years to erode away the shore entirely. That’s sufficiently long so that you don’t have to allow for the Ice Age. The age of the rocks is about a million years, or perhaps two million, just to be safe.

    Such crude estimates of geologic time were the best anyone could do until the 1960s, when radiometric dating of rocks became commonplace. The relative newness of this technology accounts for some of geology’s credibility problems, for geologic time itself was invented 100 years earlier and thus had plenty of time to develop a reputation for flakiness. While radiodating is technically difficult, indeed impossible without sophisticated equipment, it is straightforward conceptually. The method appropriate to this situation involves placing a piece of rock about the size of a golf ball in a vacuum chamber, melting the rock, collecting all the gases driven off, and measuring the total mass of the element argon that these gases contain. Then you dissolve the same rock in acid, do a bit of conventional wet chemistry with the solution, and measure the total mass of the element potassium that it contains. The ratio of these two masses, multiplied by a certain number, is the age of the rock. The physics underlying this procedure is that potassium, which is plentiful in nearly all rocks, is slightly radioactive and decays to argon, a chemically inert element. Argon likes to escape out of rocks when they are very hot, in particular when they are melted into volcanic lava, but is otherwise trapped. A conventional volcanic rock contains no argon right after it solidifies. The amount of argon it contains right now therefore counts the number of potassium atoms that decayed since it solidified, and thus the amount of time that elapsed.

    Radiometric dating has to be used cautiously, however, because it’s notoriously easy to do it wrong. The argon levels can be artificially high, for example, because of atmospheric contamination in air pockets and grain boundaries in the rock, or they can be artificially low because the rock got overheated sometime after it formed, or because the rock re-crystallized or acquired inclusions of younger rock through geologic processes underground. Sedimentary rock always gives nonsense readings because it doesn’t get hot when it forms, and because weathering, aggregation, and metamorphism cause crystal structure changes, which corrupt the argon record.

    The cliffs on my beach can be dated by a layer of volcanic ash that occurs fairly high up. The team that last surveyed the site chose not to date the ash directly, presumably because they didn’t trust the argon levels, but instead identified it chemically with ash deposited hundreds of miles away and overlain by a layer of volcanic basalt. The basalt yielded a clean argon age of two and a half million years. Basaltic rocks higher up in the mountains behind this beach, which are older, yield an age of 20 million years. The rocks on the beach are thus somewhere between two million and 20 million years old. Cross-correlation of the fossils they contain narrows this date to about six million years, give or take a million. Thus, there were no human beings on the earth when the lowermost of these layers first sedimented out of the sea. Between then and now enough rain fell on the earth to fill up the oceans 2,000 times.

    It would be very surprising if rocks conveniently near my home had especially large geologic ages, but naturally this isn’t the case. When you go through the same kinds of analysis with rocks in other parts of the world, you typically get ages that are 10 to 100 times greater than these. A particularly famous example is in the first edition of On the Origin of Species, where Charles Darwin used erosion arguments to estimate the age of the Weald, a region southeast of London curiously deficient in chalk. He came up with 300 million years. It was impossible to refine this estimate radiometrically at the time, so it’s probably not surprising that he reduced his estimate by half in the second edition and eliminated all mention of the subject in the third. But his reasoning was conceptually right, and the estimate itself was close to correct. The Weald is about 120 million years old, give or take 10 million. It’s an interesting part of England, the place where the Battle of Hastings was fought, cricket was invented, and dinosaur fossils were first discovered.

    The Weald is just the beginning, however, for Great Britain is extremely old. By a stroke of fortune, the entire country is a complete stack of the world’s sedimentary layers tipped gently downward to the northwest and then planed level at the top. The plentiful fossils in the ground, which are different in different layers, thus form narrow tracks that run roughly parallel to the coast of France. When people first discovered these tracks, they had no way to date the rocks in question, so they just assigned names. The easternmost track became Cretaceous, after the Greek word creta for chalk. The next one became Jurassic, after the Jura mountains in Switzerland. The next one became Triassic after a characteristic three-level sedimentation pattern (the Tria) found commonly in Germany. The next one became Permian, after the region of Perm in Russia. And so on and so forth. But the subsequent invention of radiodating later enabled actual ages to be assigned to these names, albeit with the precision difficulties encountered on my beach. The white cliffs of Dover are 70 million years old. The clay under Oxford is 150 million years old. The rocks under Stratford-upon-Avon are 200 million years old. The coal under Stoke-on-Trent is 300 million years old. The Lake District is 400 million years old. The Isle of Man is 500 million years old. The Highlands of Scotland are 600 million years old—and more.
    The oldest rocks in the world are not in Great Britain but in places exposed to extremes of Ice Age glaciation, such as Greenland, northern Canada, and northern Finland. Here the glaciers ground off all the upper sedimentary layers to expose the primordial rocks below. Radiometric ages of these rocks begin where the geological record in Britain ends and run back an additional four billion years. The oldest ages coincide with those of meteorites and moon rocks, implying that they date the birth of the earth. The age of the earth isn’t important for energy discussions except in establishing that cosmic events, not value judgments, set the overall scale of geologic time.

    The continents have moved up and down over the course of geologic time a greater distance than the sea is deep. We know this because the total thickness of sedimentary rock in some places exceeds four kilometers. After dating the Weald, Darwin also observed that the total thickness of all the sedimentary strata in England would total 22 kilometers if piled on top of one another. It wasn’t clear at the time how literally to interpret this fact, because nobody had mined straight down through all the layers; nor did anyone know for sure how deep the ocean was. But now the oceans have been thoroughly surveyed, and oil technologies such as echo stratigraphy and deep drilling routinely find sedimentary rock layers 10 to 15 kilometers thick. The most sensational example of such thicknesses is the Grand Canyon, which required a three-kilometer uplift from sea level to be cut by the Colorado River, and which forms, together with Utah’s Escalante Staircase, a total sedimentary mass 10 kilometers thick. The Grand Canyon also demonstrates that uplift and subsidence alternated, since it contains plant fossil layers sandwiched between marine fossil layers. Less famous but no less relevant to the vastness of geologic time is the nearby Animas River canyon, which cuts through sedimentary rock five kilometers thick. Around the world, sedimentary deposits over one kilometer thick are commonplace.
    Sea level has not, however, moved up and down over the course of geologic time an amount greater than the mountains are tall. We know this because marine sediments have accumulated continuously for the last 600 million years, which they would not have done if continental erosion had stopped or the seabed had emptied. Moreover, you can work backward from clues left in the rocks to reckon what the sea level was in the geologic past. This process has methodological uncertainties, because it involves judgments about how layer sequences in different parts of the world line up, what constitutes evidence for shorelines, and how the earth’s crust yielded and rebounded as masses of rock came and went. However, it’s accurate enough to tell you that the amount of water on the earth hasn’t changed significantly over geologic time, and that the rise and fall of the oceans is adequately accounted for by the waxing and waning of the polar ice sheets and slow changes in ocean basin volumes. The sea level has had a complex and interesting history, but it has never deviated more than 200 meters from its present value.

    The sea has risen and fallen particularly vigorously over the past million years as a result of Ice Age glaciation. We know this because oxygen isotope ratios in the ocean sediments vary violently with depth. These ratios indirectly measure the amount of water locked up in glacial ice sheets at the time of sedimentation. The sediments record nine major glacial episodes, each of which lowered the sea level by more than 50 meters and then returned it abruptly to its present value. At least four of these episodes lowered the sea by more than 100 meters. This includes the most recent one, which lowered it 120 meters. The amount of lowering is corroborated by uplifted coral reefs, which show growth in places that would otherwise have been impossible because they require shallow water. It’s also consistent with estimates of the ice mass required to leave behind such industrial-strength mischief as Long Island, Nantucket, and the Great Lakes—about 50 million cubic kilometers in all, or five million billion tons.
    The major glacial episodes are spectacular examples of the natural climate change that has occurred in geologic time. They took place at regular intervals of 100,000 years and always followed the same strange pattern of slow, steady cooling followed by abrupt warming back to conditions similar to today’s. We know this because chemical records in polar ice, the patterns of which match those of the sediments, contain a signal that strongly tracks the earth’s precessional wobble, the 24,000-year cyclic drift of the earth’s spin axis caused by the gravitational tugging of the moon and sun. The precession is a clock-like astronomical quantity, so its appearance in the ice data enables a precise dating of the ice. That, in turn, enables a precise dating of the sediments. The last glacial melting, cross-dated at 15,000 years ago by the radiocarbon age of wood debris left by the glaciers as they retreated, occurred rapidly. The sea rose more than one centimeter per year for 10,000 years, then stopped. The extra heat required for this melting was 10 times the present energy consumption of civilization. The total melt­­water flow was the equivalent of two Amazons, or half the discharge of all the rivers in all the world.

    The great ice episodes were not the only cases of natural climate change, however. Six million years ago the Mediterranean Sea dried up. Ninety million years ago alligators and turtles cavorted in the Arctic. One hundred fifty million years ago the oceans flooded the middle of North America and preserved dinosaur bones. Three hundred million years ago, northern Europe burned to a desert and coal formed in Antarctica. The great ice episodes themselves were preceded by approximately 30 smaller ones between one and two million years ago, and perhaps twice that many before that.


    Nobody knows why these dramatic climate changes occurred in the ancient past. Ideas that commonly surface include perturbations to the earth’s orbit by other planets, disruptions of ocean currents, the rise and fall of greenhouse gases, heat reflection by snow, continental drift, comet impacts, Genesis floods, volcanoes, and slow changes in the irradiance of the sun. No scientifically solid support has been found for any of these suggestions. One thing we know for sure is that people weren’t involved. There weren’t enough people around during the ice episodes to matter, and there weren’t any people around before the ice episodes.
    The geologic record as we know it thus suggests that climate is a profoundly grander thing than energy. Energy procurement is a matter of engineering and keeping the lights on under circumstances that are likely to get more difficult as time progresses. Climate change, by contrast, is a matter of geologic time, something that the earth routinely does on its own without asking anyone’s permission or explaining itself. The earth doesn’t include the potentially catastrophic effects on civilization in its planning. Far from being responsible for damaging the earth’s climate, civilization might not be able to forestall any of these terrible changes once the earth has decided to make them. Were the earth determined to freeze Canada again, for example, it’s difficult to imagine doing anything except selling your real estate in Canada. If it decides to melt Greenland, it might be best to unload your property in Bangladesh. The geologic record suggests that climate ought not to concern us too much when we’re gazing into the energy future, not because it’s unimportant, but because it’s beyond our power to control.

    Robert B. Laughlin is a professor of physics at Stanford University and a co-recipient of the 1998 Nobel Prize for Physics. This essay is adapted from his new book on the future of fossil fuels, which will appear next year.

    Monday, November 2, 2009

    What Tsien (Qian) said during the crazy year of Great Leap Forward 钱学森写过些什么?

    我本无意在今天为钱学森先生辩护或是要追究什么,毕竟这不是我本分的事情。个人以为,钱当时很可能不知道亩产高是意味着要按比例上缴的(我以前就没弄懂这点)。而且,无论钱的论证如何,他明确的指出了假设和前提,在科学和事实上并没有明显的错误或是使之受指责有违心之嫌。再说,这大灾难的帐应该算到政治决策者和体制头上,而不该要一个工程师(注1)的一篇文章为3000万条人命负责。这是当我只看到1958年文的时候的想法。毕竟,彭德怀发现大跃进的恶果也是1959年的时候了,1958年的钱,其地位和信息远不及彭的耳目灵通。

    可是,当看到有人竟然把钱先生和戈培尔相提并论, 不由得多花了点时间搜了一下。是不是还有对钱不利的证据呢?在那疯狂的年代,钱发表了三篇文章。中国青年报文是第二篇。第三篇是1959年8-9月发表的,(应该写于之前吧,庐山会议上书是在1959年7月14日)。大家留意最后一段的黑体字,钱特别强调了理想值和理论值,并提出了接近(不是达到)理想值的可能途径。然后钱进一步的区分了充分和必须条件。(这严谨的逻辑可能是作为工程师或科学家的职业惯性,也可能是他意识到他是在踩一条细线。每人可以自行理解。假如我是毛,我会理解成钱实际是为达不到“丰产”做出了解释)。假如有人要相信毛是受了钱的影响而对亩产万斤深信不疑的话,毛是否该对钱举出的通风障碍投入研发解决呢?过分的非难钱,是否有为毛转移责任之嫌呢?

    既然发生了讨论,还是该把事实都摆在眼前。因此我把三文附上。(第一篇,发表在1958/4/29人民日报,附在最后。因为愚见以为最后一篇应该代表他比较新的观点)

    With hindsight,钱可能该有伯仁因我而死之省希望他给公众一个交代也是合理的。可是,钱一生没有公开为此道歉过,因此我们无法知道他内心的真实想法,是否心怀歉意。我个人倾向于性本善论,和presumed innocent 的原则。不过,对于宽容和厚道的度,因人而异。我无意也没有必要去把自己的标准强加于人。

    related:  本乃驚弓之鳥 豈是文章殺人

    ---------
    注(1):钱学森是火箭工程师,主要是研究火箭燃料流体力学和工程控制的。不是“核物理”学家。两弹一星,他的贡献主要在“一星”(包括东风和长征火箭,洲际导弹),不是原子弹氢弹,那是邓稼先的贡献,虽然钱可能有参与行政领导。(这是根据钱的履历和论文题目推论出来的。)

    ---------
     后记: 看到毛的辩护士这样写, “据李锐在《反思大跃进》一文中记载,毛泽东的秘书田家英问毛泽东:“你也不是没当过农民,你应当知道亩产万斤是不可能的”。毛泽东说:“这是我看了大科学家钱学森的文章,才相信的。” 我想知道,毛是什么时候承认亩产万斤是不可能的?田家英向毛提问在什么时候?之前除了彭还有谁问过毛这个问题?你真的相信毛当时觉得彭在说谎吗?据说田是1958年就问毛的,就是说毛在整彭之前就知道事实了,明知而往,其责不可能在钱。

    ----------

    1) 《中国青年报》1958年6月16日第四版

    “前年卖粮用萝挑,去年卖粮用船摇,今年汽车装不了,明年火车还嫌小!”。
    这是江西井冈山农民的一首民歌。我们的土地正在农民双手豪迈的劳动中,付给人们更多的粮食,6月12日青年报第一版上发表了一个动人的消息:河南省遂平县卫星农业社继小麦亩产二千一百零五斤以后,又有二亩九分地平均每亩打下了三千五百三十斤小麦。

    土地所能人们的粮食产量碰顶了吗?
    科学的计算告诉人们:还远得很!今后,通过农民的创造和农业科学工作者的努力,将会大大突破今天的丰产成绩。因为,农业生产的最终极限决定于每年单 位面积上的太阳光能,如果把这个光能换算农产品,要比现在的丰产量高出很多。现在我们来算一算:把每年射到一亩地上的太阳光能的30%作为植物以利用的部 分,而植物利用这些太阳光能把空气里的二氧化碳和水分制造成自己的养料,供给自己发育、生长结实,再把其中的五分之一算是可吃的粮食,那么稻麦每年的亩产 量就不仅仅是现在的两千多斤或三千多斤,而是两千多斤的20多倍!

    这并不是空谈。举一个例:今年河南有些特别丰产试验田要在一亩地里收一百六十万斤蔬菜。虽说蔬菜不是粮食,但到底是亩产一百六十万斤!

    所以,只要我们有必需的水利、肥料等等条件,加上人们的不断创造,产量的不断提高是没有问题的。今天条件不具备,明天就会创造出来,今天还没有,明天一定会有!


    2) 農業中的力學問題--知識就是力量 1959年8-9月
    (a subtitled of "10,000 catty per acre is not a problem"  was erroneously added in many internet fora, but i cannot find such a subtitle in the scanned source archived at Boxun. I am interested in where this subtitle first appeared)
     (不知道谁替钱加了一条副题,"農業中的力學問題--畝產萬斤不是問題",我在原文看不到该副题,希望读者能帮助解答。还有,我找到的扫描并不完整,好像最后缺了几句的样子。还有一件怪事,就是网上引该文的都到3.9万斤或43立方米为止,没有一个网页引用最后一段的。)



    钱学森:农业中的力学问题

    这几年来,中国人民在党的建设**总路线的光辉照耀下,精神振奋,意气风发,无论在工业战线、农业战线上,都取得了很大的成就;特别是1958年大跃进以来在同一设备条件和土地上,生产量提高了许多倍。由于这种生产上飞跃的发展,也就出现了一连串新的科学技术问题,要求科学工作者去解决。我在这里想提出其中一个问题,就是农业高额丰产技术中的力学问题。

    ——我们都知道,力学是处理机械设计的问题的,是处理高速飞机设计问题的,是处理水流和气体流动问题的,怎么农业高额丰产里也会出现力学问题呢?要说明这一点,我们得先计算一下在我国平均纬度的地方,一年之中在每一亩地上到底有多少太阳光落在上面。这个能量可以用各种单位来表现。我们这里选用从水和二氧化碳制造出碳水化合物的斤数来计算,这是因为植物的生长正是利用水和二氧化碳来制造淀粉和纤维这样碳水化合物的。我们算了一下,一年中落在一亩地上的阳光,一共折合约94万斤碳水化合物。如果植物利用太阳光的效率真的是百分之百,那么单位面积干物质年产量就应该是这个数字,94万斤!

    ——自然,高等植物叶子利用太阳光的效率不可能是百分之百,估计最高也不过是1/6,这就是说,单位面积干物质的年产量大约是15.6万斤。但是植物生长中所积累的物质,只有一部分粮食,像稻、麦这一类作物的谷粒重量,约占重量的一半,所以照这样算来,单位面积的粮食的年产量应该是7.8万斤。这是说全年三百六十五天都是晴天。如果因为阴天而损失25%,那么粮食的亩产量应该是5.85万斤。这是说,作物要在全年都生长,如果仅在暖季才长,也许要再打一个 2/3 的折扣,那么平均亩产量是3.9万斤了。

    ——同样的计算也可以用来估计快速丰产林木的数字。这里相当于粮食的是蓄材量,也就是每年每亩地上的积累的木材重量。如果是常绿树,全年都长,每亩地的积累的木材重量是5.85万斤;如果是落叶树,就是3.9万斤。倘若木材属于轻质的,重量按每立方米900斤计算。那么全年都长的常绿树,每亩每年可以积累木材 63立方米,而落叶树每亩每年可以积累木材43立方米

    前面所计算的单位面积年产量,无论是粮食或是木材都是理想的极限量。要接近这个指标,必须通过密植,套种等措施,使地面终年充满了足够的绿叶,充分利用太阳光能量。其他如水,肥,土种 ,保等一切条件都得配合得十分理想。也就是由于这个缘故,在目前的农业实践中,还没有达到这样的高额丰产。可是我们从一些高额丰产试验田的情况来看,要真的接近这样的丰产极限,必须先解决一个农业中的新问题:通风问题。要实现超高额丰产,必须推行高度密植,而高度密植却带来了通风的困难。如果二氧化碳,空气都不流通,植物也就不能充分利用太阳光。农民科学研究员,陕西省乾县烽火人民公社社长王宝京搞的田间设计学,研究如何排列田间作物群体来解决通风透光问题,道理也就在这里。通风也就是气体的流动和传输。这正是流体力学的一个好题目。虽然流体力学在近50多年有了非常迅速的发展,但那都是着重在高速气流一方面的。上面所说的,在茎叶间的气流速度却非常慢。。。。。。(后面一页哪去了?anyone has the rest of the article?)

    3) 中国航天之父——钱学森1958-04-29在《人民日报》的文章,是知识精英应走的路!

    我回到祖国已经差不多有两年半了。在这两年半中间,我对于在中国作科学研究工作是有着不少错误的看法的。
    发挥集体智慧,排除个人主义,没有克服不了的困难,在我刚回到中国来的时候,单凭过去在美国的经验,觉得自己以前也搞过一些像发展液体火箭、超声速飞行 器、高速燃烧稳定等开创先例的工作。在当时,这些问题是没有解决的问题,没有老师可以请教,要自己去摸,从不懂摸到懂,从没有理论去摸索、去创造理论。

    回到祖国,根据从前在国外的一些经验,我十分乐观:心想只要有党和政府的支持,作点科学研究,解决一些工程技术问题,是毫无问题的事。党号召十二年赶上世 界先进水平,我当时心里想,怎么这么慢 ,那会要十二年!很显然,那是我无知的时期,不知天高地厚。后来研究计划定下来了,真要动手作研究了,这才逐渐感到困难重重,既没有研究工具,也没有研究 设备。同时我也想,既然有领导的支持,那么就让我们来动手作吧,来设计、创造研究设备吧。可是连这也干不了,为什么呢?因为没有研究队伍,金工厂也没有。 这时候,我的思想转了一百八十度,从乐观一变而为悲观,真是觉得作科学研究寸步难移,简直急死人。其实这正是我的学习时期,可以说比刚一开始 懂得了一点,知道了一些实际东西,可是知道得还不多。我不知道在艰苦的环境中奋斗、找出路,怎样白手起家。现在想起来,出路明明白白地摆在那儿,办一切事 业的唯一好办法,包括科学研究在内,就是发动大家、依靠大家。从一个研究所的范围来讲,所谓大家,就是全所的人员,全所的研究和行政事务人员 。我们能和大家一起动手,那么做一天就会有一天的成绩,不会做的事也可以学,因为作错了也可以学乖,今天不会的,明天就会了。发动大家这件事看来简单,但 对个人主义者来说,也就是对我这样具有资产阶级思想的人来说,却是不容易做到的。因为有了个人打算,要 和人比高低,就会把劲头用错地方,不用在解决研究问题上去,而是用在一天到晚筹划个人划。这样当然达不到真正的团结,人与人之间有了隔阂。当我们考虑问题 的时候思想上就走不到一处,就没有法子发挥集体的智慧。这个问题表现在很多的地方,例如:年青的研究人员怕年长的研究人员;而年青的却不知道,年长的也怕 年青的,最 好不找他们。高级研究人员之间也是这样,讨论问题时,心里先就作一个防备,生怕自己漏了,漏出毛病来,让另外一位同志看见了丢脸,将来也许不能保持自己的 威信。真是思想上顾虑重。

    所内常常看到一些研究人员愁眉苦脸,觉得压力很大。正在这个时候,我们的党提出了整风的号召,整风运动开始后,跟着就是反右派,搞干部下放 ,然后是查五气、反浪费、反保守,这么一来,我们这些知识分子都认识了自己资产阶级错思想之所在,也看清了昨日之我如何可恨,今天非痛改不可。这就是说每 一个人的思想觉悟都大大地提高了,大家的眼光、目标都转到六亿人民的事业上去了!所以,我相信在这次整风运动以后,每一个人都会表现出一番新的气概,从前 的那些困难也一定会一扫而空。只要我们能够附上工人阶级的皮,我们就可以跟六亿人民在一道,我们的力量真是无穷无尽,绝对不会有什么克服不了的困难。所以 我现在又恢复了两年多以前的高度乐观。我觉得科学的跃进要乘风破浪,这是完全可能的。现在谈科学规划,应该把眼光放远 ,既然如此,我们就应该把眼光放远些,看看在比较长的时期内,我们有些什么问题。举个例来说,我们应该注意到,从农业发展纲要四十条提出来以后,全国农业 合作社的社员们生产情绪高涨。尤其在去冬以来,在党的领导下,真是排山倒海。估计这四十条可能在七年或者更短一些时间就可以实现。在科学研究上,七年的时 间不是一个太长的时间。我们现在应该想想,农业发展纲要四十条的内容统统实现以后,下一步又要干什么?要干的事,在科学研究方面应作好准备,到时候我们就 能跟得上去。在这一点上,我是外行。作为一个搞力学的人来说,不免总是从能量方面来考虑。最近我算过这么一个粗浅的账,就是地球上一个单位面积上,受太阳 的能有多少。假设我们说一 天太阳光照在地面上,只照八小时,一年三百六十五天,八小时太阳光照上去,如果我们只计算1%的能用来转变为植物有效利用的能,这个能把水和二氧化碳转变 为淀粉,那么就可以在一亩面积上年产约八千市斤的淀粉。当然这里面有许多问题,不是那么简单。但我们可以向这个方向去考虑。关于农业生产方面还有许多问 题,如人工气象的控制等。当水利方面已经实现农业发展纲要规定的指标的时候,就可以基本上免除不太大的自然灾害。但比较大的自然灾害,如台风,是不是就不 能控制呢?这也是一个值得研究的问题。再说我们的农业动力问题,在这方面看来一个重要的解决途径是所谓生物能的利用,也就是使粪便和杂草?酵产生沼气。这 个过程基本上是炭水化合物的分解,分解后产生的东西差不多一半是沼气,一半是二氧化碳。如用这种混合气体当然不太好烧,沼气虽然是很好的燃料,而二氧化碳 不是很好的动力燃料,它夹杂在里面只会减低燃烧速度。因此,就要想出办法把沼气和二氧化碳分离,用纯沼气作为内燃机的动力,这就可以解决我们缺乏石油资源 的困难。同时,二氧化碳也有用处。二氧化碳对植物来说是一种肥料,是不是能考虑在暖房里把空气中充上二氧化碳,使植物的生长可以更好一些。同时二氧化碳可 以用来培养小球藻,而小球藻又含有相当多的蛋白质,至少是很好的饲料,可以喂猪。像这一系列的问题,就不仅是农业机械化、电气化、化学化的问题,而是把工 程技术、自然科学知识怎样应用到农业上去,使农业生产也成为一个工厂似的,在控制的条件上来生产。这也可叫作农业的工业化。这个问题需要相当长的时间才能 解决,是高度综合性的,其中有各方面的问题,差不多各个研究部门都同它有关。

    也许有的同志会这么想:这些新技术,今天我们来谈是不是太远一点?今天在全国大跃进的形势下,我们的思想很容易落在现实的后 面。我们国家里的事情总是走得很快,而科学研究不应该是生产的尾巴,应该走在生产的前面。所以讨论科学规划的时候,应当从长计较 。各门科学要互相支援、互相渗透,使科学能全面发展中国科学院最宜于发展学科之间的新科学,譬如说物理就应该渗透到各个部门中去。现在提出的生物物理,就 是一门很重要的科学。同时我们也应该考虑怎样使自然科学、技术科学渗透到社会科学部门。例如:能不能让近代数学的方法和计算技术为工程经济和工业经济 服务?在以前因为计算太多,分析有困难而不去做的问题,有了新方法就能做了。自然,数学只是一个工具,用了它不是去改变社会科学而是去帮助社会科学的发 展。在高潮中跃进在我们党的领导下,经过整风以后,全国掀起了一个大跃进的高潮。在这个高潮中,我们每个人也受到了很大的鼓舞。从前看起来不能做到的事, 现在也能做到了。我们科学工作者不仅有我国六亿人民的支持,只要我们把我们的心掏出来,把心交给党,交给人民,我们科学事业的大跃进是一定的。

    ----

     钱学森在美国的老师冯.卡门关于钱学森的回忆

    我的朋友钱学森是我1945年向美国空军科学顾问组推荐的专家之一。他是当时美国处于领导地位的第一流火箭专家,后来变成了世界闻名的新闻人物。钱学森作为加州理工学院火箭小组的元老,曾在二次大战期间对美国的火箭研究作出过重大贡献。

    美国情报机关无视钱学森的学识、名望以及对美国的贡献,1950年指控他是外国共产党分子,硬说对他所居留的国家构成危害。当他打算动身回归中国时,被移民局逮捕,关押在拘留所里两个星期。随后,违背他的意愿,被滞留在美国达五年之久,经常受到被放逐的威胁。1955年,他在饱尝不公正待遇的辛酸后,收拾行装,返回祖国。美国实际上并无真正站得住的理由,就把最出色的一位火箭专家奉送给了红色中国。

    美国这一悲剧是如何发生的呢?钱学森出生在上海,在他称为古老中国庄严中心的北京长大。在那里,他进入一所专为富有才能的青年设立的中学。接着去上海交通大学攻读机械工程。1935年,他考取庚子赔款公费留学,前往美国,在麻省理工学院取得硕士学位。1936年的一天,他来征询进一步进行学术研究的意见。这是我们第一次见面。我抬头看到一位个子不高、仪表严肃的年轻人。他异常准确地回答了我的所有问题。他思维的敏捷和富于智慧,顿时给我以深刻印象。我建议他转到加州理工学院来继续深造。

    钱同意了。他在许多数学问题上和我一起工作。我发现他非常富有想象力,具有天赋的数学才智,有成功地把数学与自然现象中物理图像结合在一起的非凡能力。作为一个青年学生,他帮我提炼了某些思想,使一些很艰深的命题变得豁然开朗。这种天资是我所不常遇到的,因而他和我成了亲密的同事,并很快引起学院其他教授们的注意。

    钱喜欢到我家作客。由于他饶有风趣的见解和诚挚直率的风度,我妹妹总是很欢迎他的到来。他丰富的想象力和各种新颖的思想,使我们倾服。记得在试验导弹的早期日子里,钱意识到导弹日益增长着的重要性:半开玩笑地建议在美国设立一个喷气式武器部,在那里应能集中力量研制导弹。他当时指出,这里的技术同其它类型武器所要求的完全不同,必须委托给军事部门的一个新团体,要用新的军事思想和思想方法去进行研究。后来证明这是非常正确的。他甚至还建议我们成立一个学会来促进喷气推进技术。

    对实现加州理工学院的喷气助推起飞研究计划,钱有过重大贡献。后来,他接受我的邀请,参加了空军科学顾问组。

    在加州理工学院的校园里,钱并不是最为一般人爱戴的教授,因为他严厉、性情急躁,对学生显得有点傲慢。不过,我认为对于学生来说,同他接触,了解一下他如何对待和处理技术问题是颇有益处的。他对我一直非常尊敬,虽然我们已经成为亲密的朋友,他还是用那种古老的中国方式称呼我为“尊敬的老师”。在中国。

    这也许是一个人给别人的最高赞词。1947年2月,我愉快地推举他为麻省理工学院正教授。

    此后不久,钱收到从中国的来信,说他的母亲去世了。他决定回祖国去安抚年迈的父亲。这是他12年来第一次回国。几个月后,在一封长信里他十分详尽地告诉我他在祖国见到的人民贫困和痛苦。当时那里是在国民党人手里。信的结尾他顺便告诉我,他已经和一位名叫蒋英的姑娘在上海结婚,准备把她带来美国。她是一位具有歌唱家天才的可爱的世界主义者,曾在柏林研究过德国歌曲,后来在苏黎世接受一位匈牙利女高音歌唱家的指导。钱爱好音乐,看来他很幸福。我也感到高兴,他终于找到一位具有国际知识的妻子。

    有一件事他没有提及,是我后来听说的,他在中国时,曾拒绝接受要他担任交通大学校长职位的聘请。

    他值五个师:

    在麻省理工学院执教两年左右后,钱又回到加州理工学院,担任喷气推进课程的戈达德教授以及丹尼尔和弗罗伦斯8226;古根汉姆喷气推进中心的领导人。实际上他在1949年已经写过第一篇关于火箭技术(sunbun: 没有“核”火箭这种东西,应是译误)的出色论文,至今仍被认为是这个领域中的一篇经典性名著。

    这时,在美国,以麦卡锡为首对共产党人实行了全面追查。在全国掀起了一股驱使雇员们效忠政府的歇斯底里狂热。加州理工学院,这所素有维护许多奇特的、独立的科学家名声的小小加州学府,不可避免的会受到注意。凡是于1936年至1939年期间在加州理工学院生活过的人,都有披视为四十年代中不可靠分子的危险。

    一天,怀疑终于落到了钱的身上。事情可能是这样开始的:当时要他揭发一个名叫西德尼8226;槐因包姆的化学研究负,此人曾在一起与共产主义有关的案件中提供过伪证而正在帕沙迪纳受审。钱同他有过一般交往,为他介绍过职业,还曾去过他家欣赏古典音乐。

    钱拒绝揭发他的朋友,1950年7月间,军事部门出乎意外地突然吊销了钱参加机密研究的证书。

    钱的自尊心受到了严重伤害。他去找加州理工学院院长李8226;杜布里奇,申明失去了接触机密正书,他根本无法继续进行喷气推进的研究。他感情激动地说,宁肯回中国老家去,也不愿在受人怀疑的情况下继续居留美国。杜布里奇安慰他,希望他保持镇静,建议他对这个决定提出申诉。但是,钱并不想提出申诉,因为他感到,正像他的许多朋友遇到的那样,在当时的气氛下,一个异邦的中国教授不会有多大希望打赢这场官司。何况钱又是那么骄傲,他并不认为他必须向当局证明他不是一个共产党人。

    当钱的接触机密证书被吊销时,我正在欧洲。我从杜布里奇院长那里听到这消息后,即刻写信给钱,表示我的震惊,并告诉他我将为他做我能做的一切。许多重要人物出来声援钱。但无济于事。

    钱会见过丹尼尔8226;金布尔。金布尔作为海军次长,对钱在喷气推进中心承担的研究计划负责。钱告诉金布尔,如果不恢复他的证书,他打算回中国去。但是毫无结果。这样,钱就定下决心,打电话给这位次长,说他已经准备动身了。

    金布尔十分激动,随即通知了移民局。事后他私下对我说,这是因为怕钱回到中国使共产党人得到美国喷气推进研究的军事机密。然而,后来事情竟然这样快地变糟,我想金布尔也会感到惊奇甚至震惊(据外电报道,丹8226;金布尔曾说过:“我宁肯把他枪毙,也不愿放回中国,无论在什么地方他都值5个师。”——校者注)。移民局不仅搜查他,粗暴地对待他,还在特米那岛上的拘留所中把他拘留了14天,直到收取了巨额保释金以后才释放了他。

    后来事情竟发展到了极点。海关没收了他的行李,包括800多公斤书籍和笔记本。他们硬说其中有机密材料。全世界各国的报纸都刊登新闻说:一名“共产党间谍”企图携带机密文件离开这个国家。当然,这都是谎言。事实上我听说,钱是足够正大光明的。在他打包以前,曾把所有资料交克拉克8226;米利根检查过。接着,帕沙迪纳的美国检查官在审查了钱的所有材料之后,辨明钱是无罪的。

    可是,1950年10月,移民局根据麦卡锡法案,发布一项放逐令,宣称钱是一名外国共产党分子,因为他在1947年非法地再度进入美国。这样一来。这位仅仅在两年前还获得过美国政府最高赞扬的骄傲而有教养的人,发现自己不仅完全处于被迫害的境地,而且处于被抛离这个国家的危险之中。

    终于回国钱变得十分阴郁。他已经不能集中精力去研究技术问题了。

    我和我的所有同事都确实相情,钱并不是共产党员,最多不过曾同某些后来被认出是共产党员或共产党同情者的人有过一般社交关系,移民局捕风捉影的证据是全然不可信的。曾经有好几种说法。我的朋友马勃教授告诉我,其中一个说法是:

    两名洛杉矶警官说他们曾经在其形容为共产党员登记卡片上,见到过钱的名字,但却不是钱本人的笔迹。“似乎还提出过其他疑点。

    马勃教授还告诉我,一位共产党教授曾被要求提供证明,证实钱是共产党。最初这位教授拒绝作证,他说对饯的指控是不真实的。后来他被起诉,政府威胁他说,因提供伪证罪他将被判处四年徒期。他旋即改口,作了“伤害性”供述,说他“设想”钱是一名共产党人,在一次所谓共产党会议上好象看见过钱。

    帕沙迪纳移民局下令驱逐钱出境,甚至带有威胁地诣往说,如果钱不承认是共产党员,就要判他以伪证罪。作为事情的完结,钱被滞留美国长达五年,以致中国公开发表声明,谴责美国政府在违背本人意愿的情况下监禁了一个中国公民。

    拘留钱的目的,是要使他当时所掌握的一切知识变得陈旧过时。钱继续在加州理工学院执教,但必须每月向移民局作一次汇报。对他来说这是一种屈辱。他从未放弃口中国去的打算,因为他觉得,只有中国在真正营救他,而且在那里他会得到应有的礼遇。

    钱学森、他的妻子蒋英以及他们的两个孩子于1955年离开了这个回家。有传闻说,他是与一个红色中国手里的盟军俘虏在华沙进行了交换,但我并不认为这是真的。无论如何,中国政府乐于请他回到中国。于是,美国火箭技术领域一位最伟大的天才,我的一位杰出学生,就这样交给了共产党人。

    ------

    Wednesday, May 27, 2009

    Map: anti-podal maps


    (Via Armcontrolwonk) This map shows where the opposite (anti-podal) point on the earth is. i.e. North Pole corresponds to South Pole. One can easily check up one's anti-podal point by change the coodinate (change lattitude from N to S, then add/subtract 180 on longitude). But it is neat to view this on a globe.

    ACW cited this when he read that vibration typically get 'magnified' on anti-podal points as noted by astronomers observing the moon and some planets. He thinks this may be used to measure earthquake (and nuclear tests).

    The physical explanation may be quite simple, as the anti-podal point represents THE equi-distant (both on earth surface and via the mantle/core) point, such that all waves arrive IN PHASE (ignoring fluctuations in rock type/etc). This means it would be difficult to measure earthquake anti-podally since these are random events and one does not know where to place the probe in advance, but for monitoring nuclear tests with known sites this could be pretty effective.

    A few interesting observations
    • Very few land has land as antipodal points, mainly because there are only 30% land on earth and most of it is on the northern hemisphere. (this makes ACW's plan more difficult/costly)
    • The few land-land pairs include (this site provides a great tool)- Beijing's anitpode is a few hundred km south of Buenos Aires, Xian and Santiago (Chile) are almost exact antipode pairs (perhaps the only major city pair). Jakarta/Bogota and Singapore/Quito are also close enough. New Zealand's antipode is Spain (auckland/Seville). -- play these games to test your geographic knowledge.
    • The Yucatan meteorite at Chicxulub crater, which allegedly killed the dinosaurs, would probably have had created some folding under the ocean between NW Australia and Cocos Islands in the Indian Ocean. However,  some people believe that the Chicxulub antipode is actually the Deccan Traps inside India because techtonic movement shifted the Indian subcontinent
    ---



    The map above shows the wave-front of the DPRK shock (test). Ideally these contours should be circle, but they are distorted because of rock/water structure the p-wave passes through (changes the speed the sound wave travels).

    Given these contours, it is now easy to measure future shocks (from the same location) much more accurately. The trick is to put an array of probes spaced on a chosen contour such that the signal these probes received are all "in phase". Adding these signals (time-plotted) up will result in strong signal since the noises are not in phase and tends to cancel out. This will achieve similar or even better results than a measure from the antipode.



    Saturday, March 28, 2009

    Warming?

    1) A Berkeley professor dares to debunk the popular wisdom about the future of energy.


    IMO the rationale for energy conservation should simply be, "we do not have unlimited source of energy (at least, before we can efficiently convert/store solar energy, to a level on par with what chlorophyll does)". Global warming mongering is like predicting China's GDP/cap will surpass that of US in 15 years -- simple straight line projection ignoring any non-linear effects/secondary corrections.

    Monday, February 16, 2009

    Darwin's theory - the mathematical argument

    Charles Darwin is perhaps one of the most influential scientists in the past 300 years. The others include Newton and Einstein. The reasoning behind Darwin's theory can explain phenomena observed in many fields in this world, including even modern business and finance.

    For example, the evolution of the players in an industry mimics the various species in a habitat where new species are evolved and the fittest survives. Each thriving company would have mastered its own niche, like a thriving species does. As the environment shifts, 
    The only key difference, as strategist Bruce Henderson noted, is that evolutionary path in the natural world "happen", more or less by chance of the re-shuffling of the double helix. While companies can actively pursue its strategy to chose its own path (and hence niche/competitive advantage).

    In finance, one simple analogy is the stock market indices such as DJIA, where successful company phases in and the less successful one phases out, creates an illusion to us that stock price always grow (with the indices). While in reality many companies failed and many investments disappeared, but they are not reflected in your DJIA or Hang Seng.

    People are often under the impression that it is possible to win against the casinos, as we often hear (directly or indirectly) people bragging how much they got from a trip to Macau or Vegas, or their friends or friend of friends, if not themselves. One often fails to notice the fact that people usually won't tell you if they lost. So you got only a biased sample of gamblers. Those who vanished after losing their lives' saving won't have the opportunity to tell you their stories, just like the out-competed species who will not live to tell you theirs.
    -- the simple fact is, casino is a very profitable business. Casinos make a lot of money despite the high operating cost and heavy tax.

    I can go on and on, which is why Darwin is so great, in my view.

    There are many evidence supporting Darwin's theory, which you may all have read. The most important (to some, 'controversial') idea of Darwin is that Species are not stationary, they evolve, and new species will appear as a result of 'evolution'.

    Here I want to lay out a simple argument, simply based on two pieces of facts
    1) There are only finite number of species in history
    2) Species extinct in the past, present, and also likely in future

    They we can reason as below
    3) If there is no new species coming into this world, the total number of species will decrease (monotonically -- to borrow a high school mathematice term)
    4) When such trend continues, and unless the rate of decrease of the disappearing (extinct) species falls at certain rate (mathematically, the sum over time converges to a finite number) -- which is certain untrue at present time as we witness the lost of species much faster than any other time in human history, mostly due to the impact of human themselves -- there will be very few (or no) species left within a finite number of years.

    Therefore, there are only 2 alternatives (with the caveats stated above). (A) New species emerges over time. (B) There will be very few species left in some years.

    Now let's start this line of thought from a couple billion years back, when we first observed life on earth (from fossils). 
    1) the total number of species in our world today is 3-30 million
    2) the history of life on earth is about 3.5bn years
    3) if no new species emerged since "genesis" (i.e. 3.5bn years ago), then the total number of lives back then would be 3m+(3.5bn)X, where X is the number of species extinct per year. (to be more precise, this should be an integral, as the rate is not a constant. but we can approximate)

    We know that many species extinct each year in today's world. Without the human impact this rate of extinction would be much slower, however, we do see many species extinct in the past, such as the dinosaurs, the trilolites. If only on average one species extinct per year, the total number of species existed on earth 3.5bn years ago would have to be 3.5bn+3m! One has to ask, if the earth is large enough to accomodate so many species, given it could only house 30m today.

    Friday, November 28, 2008

    The myth of the "Earthquake Line" in China

    There is an article widely cross-posted around the internet about a 'mysterious earthquake line' running from the estuary of Tumen River to the SW of Yunnan bordering Myanmar. Alleged this line connects The 1975 Haicheng quake, 1976 Tangshan quake, 1966 Xintai quake, 1695 Linfen Quake and even this year's Yinxiu quake on May 12th. (Further claim by "readers" even includes those 1000 years: 1037 Kaifeng, 1303 Zhaocheng, 1555 Weizhou, 1654 Xian and others)

    Here is the "earthquake line"

    Pretty inpressive, it seems. I happen to have scanned a "full" (recorded) earthquake map for China back in May. and also an "earthquake belt map" in the same post. Amazed by this map, I dig it out and draw a line and this is what I get.


    The red dots are quakes since 1900 (size represents strength) and green dots are major quakes recorded in history. I am not sure if I would call this a correlation line. Yes, a line passing half a dozen major quakes, ok, but there are many dozens of such quakes and I can draw a hundred of these lines from this map. 
    • Note some quakes, e.g. Haicheng is more than 100km away from "the line", the first map seems to have been distorted and the dot blurred
    • The line does not pass Henan at all, so I do not know how the 1037 quake was claimed to be on the line, even the 1654 Xian quakes are more than 200 km from "the line". The original poster appears to be a bit more rigorous than those "readers"
    • (A technical note: we are drawing line on a 'flatten' map while the earth is actually a sphere, so there are many ways to draw it. The geodesic (great circle line) is probably the most natural way to draw so the 'line' is only an approximation (though a reasonably good one).
    Earthquakes do form patterns, as they are correlated with plate techtonics and fault lines, as indicated in, e.g., this chart, or this. If there really is a line, it would be the one running NS from Yinchuan to Kunming, which is, in fact 2 fault lines approxinately lined up by coincidence.

    This charts show how one can create false correlation by selectively removing the data points. This is exactly what those earthquake predictors have done, selecting the a few data points from the hundreds such that they fit the "proposed" formula.

    Wednesday, October 8, 2008

    Nobel prize: the Japanese experience

    The diligent Japanese have finally proven they are not just the engineers who could only innovate on the breakthrough of others. They still have very strong "pipeline" (candidate) who could win another in the next couple of days, e.g., the acclaimed writer Murakami Haruki (村上春樹).

    So far they have won 16 Nobel prizes, of which 15 were Japanese citizens at the time of receiving the prize. The 16th Nambu who won the physics prize this year, was educated in Japan, became a professor in Japan, and moved to US only after his 31st birthday.

    氏名 受賞年 部門 理由等
    湯川秀樹 1949年 物理学賞 中間子の存在の予想。コロンビア大学在籍中に受賞。
    朝永振一郎 1965年 物理学賞 量子電気力学分野での基礎的研究。
    川端康成 1968年 文学賞 『雪国』、『千羽鶴』、『古都』等の作品。
    江崎玲於奈 1973年 物理学賞 半導体におけるトンネル効果の実験的発見。IBM在籍中に受賞。
    佐藤栄作 1974年 平和賞 非核三原則の提唱。
    福井謙一 1981年 化学賞 化学反応過程の理論的研究。
    利根川進 1987年 生理学・医学賞 多様な抗体を生成する遺伝的原理の解明。MIT在籍中に受賞。
    大江健三郎 1994年 文学賞 万延元年のフットボール』、『燃え上がる緑の木』三部作等の作品。
    白川英樹 2000年 化学賞 導電性高分子の発見と発展。
    野依良治 2001年 化学賞 キラル触媒による不斉合成反応の研究。
    小柴昌俊 2002年 物理学賞 天体物理学、特に宇宙ニュートリノの検出に対するパイオニア的貢献。
    田中耕一 2002年 化学賞 生体高分子の同定および構造解析のための手法の開発。
    南部陽一郎[1] 2008年 物理学賞 自発的対称性の破れの発見。
    小林誠 2008年 物理学賞 対称性の破れによるクオーク世代の予言(小林・益川理論)。
    益川敏英 2008年 物理学賞 対称性の破れによるクオーク世代の予言(小林・益川理論)。
    下村脩 2008年 化学賞 緑色蛍光タンパク質(GFP)の発見とその開発。

    In fact, the Japanese have already won 4 prizes between 2000-2002 in consecutive years. 

    One interesting coincidence is that it seems that they tend to win Nobels when the US is in recession (e.g., 1973-74, 1987, 2000-2002, 2008; the economy wasn't great in 1981 and 1994 either).

    This is a very strong refute to the myth that Japan does not (know how to) innovate which was a very popular belief from the 1980s through even today. See, e.g., The New Scientist article published in 1989, "No-bells for Japan"
    • "This worries policymakers even more than the league table of Nobel prizewinners does. Yoshihiro Miki, director of policy research in the government's Science and Technology Agency (STA), says that Japan has completed the 'catch-up stage' in its scientific development: it has closed the gap over the period since the end of the Second World War. To go further it will need fundamental changes to encourage its scientists to be creative. 'We need to have an environment where researchers can freely display their creativity and ability,' says Miki. "

    A lot (11 to be exact) of "bells" for Japan have been awarded since, across all disciplines (except for the Economic Prize.  They even won an infamous Peace Prize - even though the Japanese were not involved in international political power game such as the Israelie-Palestine deal and the Vietnam cease-fire talk),  4 in the past few days.

    It should be noted that most of the works for these prizes were accomplished before the 1989 article was written (when Mr Miki lamented). e.g. the Cabibo-Kobayahi-Maskawa matrix was published in 1973. The reform in Japan started in 1860's and the first Japanese Nobel (Yukawa) was awarded in 1949 (90 years later) for works that was done in 1935 when he published the "Yukawa potential".

    What Japan has shown us is that fundamental education and a reasonably funded but propoerly managed (i.e. fair) academic system (which it enjoyed) play a much more important role than government directive or intervention (which the pundits derided) when it comes to innovation.

    This bring to the question of China. So far there are 9 ethnic Chinese who have won the Nobel prize. None of them hold Chinese passport
    • Only Gao Xingjiang's work was done entirely within China. (the only non-scientist, non-politician)
    • Only 2 physicists (Yang and Lee) completed their undergraduate in China, Dan Tsui was educated in US. The other 3 physicists, Chu, Ting and Tsien were not even born in China
    • The chemist, Lee Yuan-tseh was educated in NTU, Taiwan, which is basically the same system Yang and Lee went through
    • The DL is a Tibetan grew up in India and the west, and the prize he received does not exactly reflect education and scientific/cultural advanceness (and some readers, including the DL himself or many Chinese nationalists, do not think he is considered Chinese at all)
    ... and the Japanese lessons for China
    1. Can China foster an environment for innovation of the Nobel quality? Yes, it has produced Gao, and partially Yang and Lee -- there will be another Dan Tsui, another Y-T Lee once in a few years since there are so many people who went to the US for PhD and stayed behind
    2. Were these prizes more like an anomaly of the Chinese education system? Yes, considering Gao is an outlier in the circle and Yang/Lee could not have done the same work had they stayed in China (and the 50 year-vacuum afterwards) -- China today is at best the 1960s of Japan when it got a couple sporadic prizes, so we have have one or two Nobel laureate in the coming decade, but the paths of these winners will be quite different from their peers
    3. When will China be really part of the "Nobel community" (i.e. on par with Japan, Germany, Switzerland, etc)? Probably another 3 decades, if Japan's path is to be followed. The innovation in Japan started in 1970s (or late 1960s) and the harvest started about 30 years later. Today's China resembles Japan in late 1970s, in terms of economic development and education. Yes, China is on an accelerated path, but the corruption, poor management of its research and education system could more than offset the 'economic acceleration' plus the 'population scale' it may enjoy in the next 2 decades