Month: January 2013 (page 4 of 5)

those long january mornings

The New York Times has an explanation of why it continues to stay dark in the mornings even after the solstice has passed and the days get longer. It has to do with the intricacies of elliptical orbit and axial tilt.

Earth’s tilt means that every day during the fall, the angle at which we view the Sun changes. It appears farther south and travels a shorter arc across the sky, affecting sunrise and sunset equally, and making the day shorter.

The changes in the solar time follow a different cycle. In the early 1600s, Keplerdiscovered that planets move faster at the part of their orbit that is closest to the sun, the perihelion. For Earth, perihelion comes a little after the winter solstice, so from November on, Earth is accelerating.

That increased speed means we reach the Sun’s maximum a little earlier each day, which pushes solar noon backward against clock time. That shift is amplified because the Sun is traveling a little south each day, while clocks only count its east to west traverse.

Add it all together and you get sunrise and sunset times that are not symmetrical. In the weeks before the winter solstice, sunrise is being pushed later by both the changing angle of the Sun and the slowing of solar time. But sunset is being pushed in both directions — earlier by the Sun’s angle and later by the change in solar time.

Read the whole explanation here.

can pap smears do more?

Pap smear

Endocervical cells from a pap smear. Picture from Wikipedia.

Pap smears are used to diagnose cervical cancer in women. Cells from the cervix are collected and examined under a microscope for abnormalities. A new study suggests that it might be an even more useful procedure, with the ability to detect ovarian and uterine cancers as well. From the New York Times:

For the first time, researchers have found genetic material from uterine or ovarian cancers in Pap smears, meaning that it may become possible to detect three diseases with just one routine test.

But the research is early, years away from being used in medical practice, and there are caveats. The women studied were already known to have cancer, and while the Pap test found 100 percent of the uterine cancers, it detected only 41 percent of the ovarian cancers. And the approach has not yet been tried in women who appear healthy, to determine whether it can find early signs of uterine or ovarian cancer.

On the other hand, even a 41 percent detection rate would be better than the status quo in ovarian cancer, particularly if the detection extends to early stages. The disease is usually advanced by the time it is found, and survival rates are poor. About 22,280 new cases were expected in the United States in 2012, and 15,500 deaths. Improved tests are urgently needed.

There is still much more to work out. Can it detect early stage cancers? Are the signs present in women who haven’t already been diagnosed with cancer and appear healthy? Here’s hoping. More here.

cellular origami

Scientific American had this interesting video on scientists folding microscopic origami using cells. Check it out!

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