Time Travel: Resolving the Grandfather Paradox – Experimentally

Mutant Fish

The mere fact that people are doing experiments which explore time travel, and publishing their results in respected peer-reviewed journals is pretty damn amazing. The article, https://www.physorg.com/news/2011-03-grandfather-paradox.html talks about a series of experiments that are being performed by folks at MIT and elsewhere to see exactly what is preventing the grandfather paradox from occurring during time travel.

“Ah!” You might say – just make time travel against the laws of physics, and you can avoid the whole issue. Unfortunately, or perhaps fortunately, travel on the so-called “closed timelike curves,” or “CTCs” is allowed by general relativity. The problem has been how to resolve issues like the case when you show a mathematician a proof from the future and she proceeds to publish _that_proof_. The question about where that proof came from is left as an exercise for the reader. For all the details, you can read the complete paper at Physics Review Letters: https://prl.aps.org/abstract/PRL/v106/i4/e040403

Mutant fish survive Hudson River Toxins!

Mutant Fish

It appears that our friends at NYC Resistor and Alpha One Labs may have some interesting neighbors – apparently some fish in the Hudson River have been mutating in order to evade the high levels of dioxin and other toxins in the water. https://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/69976/title/Packing_away_the_poison

The problem, of course, is that as soon as something eats _those_ fish, they get an even heftier dose of the toxin – and so it goes. The article over at Science News is actually pretty interesting, and demonstrates how living systems can quickly evolve to adapt to new circumstances. As always, I am a sucker for mutant monsters and toxic waste…

HacDC Science is back, baby! This time it is neuroscience…

Thank to help from several of my fellow HacDCers, I have my HacDC website access working again, and you know what that means- more SCIENCE content! Today a quick pointer to a fascinating article on the computer simulation of a mammalian brain – or at least an important portion of one- the neocortical column from a common laboratory mouse. The cool thing is that they generated much of the data needed to run the simulation (at the scale of one processor per neuron right now) by using laboratory robots to generate a huge number of experiments on living mouse cells, the data from which were put directly into the simulator. Very, very interesting approach, and an equally cool result- reproducible prediction of the brain’s response to stimuli by the model, which matches perfectly with what is observed in the living mouse. We are getting close to where we are only Moore’s Law away from being able to do the same thing with a human brain. If you read the article here: https://seedmagazine.com/content/article/out_of_the_blue/ be sure and ask me about my related funny Terry Sejnowski story.

HacDC is officially a public charity under the 501(c)(3) provision of the tax code!

HacDC has now received notification of its approval for 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status. Hence, all donations to the organization given after March 25, 2008 can be considered charitable gifts and are tax-deductible as allowed by law. And, in celebration and if you appreciate HacDC’s workspace and programs, now would be an excellent time to donate!

HacDC’s successful 501(c)(3) application is another validation of the claim that the amateur engineering workshops in this “new wave” of hackerspaces offer educational and societal benefits worthy of their recognition as public charities. HacDC was one of the earliest of these “new wave” hackerspaces to be established, and recently KQED in California did an excellent profile of our sister hackerspace Noisebridge in San Francisco. It is an outstanding introduction to what Noisebridge, HacDC, and other hackerspaces are all about.


QUEST on KQED Public Media.