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Well, your posts sent me on quite a rabbit-hole of a trip.fresh_42 said:Actually seeing the results on TV can be very convincing, and it wasn't trash TV, it was a serious documentary on a serious channel with a serious Chilean biologist whodiscoveredfound that plant.
Did I make myself guilty of that?! I hate it when I don’t catch my errors, although they are legion and it’s comparable to the charge of the light brigade in hopelessness.symbolipoint said:Watch for a misspelling. Looking into the wikipedia article about Platypus, those spurs on rear fin are VENOMOUS. To tell in the post that they are "venous" seems a misspelling.
Yep, fitting algorithms can sometimes push precision limits.Ivan Seeking said:I put together a curve-fitting program for a control system, using the least squares method for typically 100-1000 data points. The math gets a little crazy. In order to maintain five significant figures in my results, I had to go to seventeen significant figures in the calculations. A subtraction operation zeroed out the first twelve significant figures for real data having five sig figs. ACK!
Ivan Seeking said:I put together a curve-fitting program for a control system, using the least squares method for typically 100-1000 data points. The math gets a little crazy. In order to maintain five significant figures in my results, I had to go to seventeen significant figures in the calculations. A subtraction operation zeroed out the first twelve significant figures for real data having five sig figs. ACK!
It's also worth mentioning that, although ## \Sigma x_n - \Sigma y_n ## and ## \Sigma( x_n - y_n )## are mathematically identical, computationally they could be significantly different when working with limited precision.collinsmark said:Yep, fitting algorithms can sometimes push precision limits.
But beware of overfitting. Not only does overfitting waste computational resources, it can lead to erroneous conclusions -- and as possibly applied here: suboptimal control systems.
---- The Sting of the Ant, Paraponera clavataThe stings, however, were equal to a bad wasp sting [sic].
---- A reexamination of poneratoxin from the venom of the bullet ant Paraponera clavata (Citations removed by me).Spruce wrote of a sting by Paraponera: “I was in agonies, and had much to do to keep from throwing myself on the ground and rolling about as I had seen the Indians do when suffering from the stings of this ant. I can only liken the pain to that of a hundred thousand nettle stings. My feet and sometimes my hands trembled as though I had the palsy, and for some time the perspiration ran down my face from the pain”. Further biology of these ants and their venom is detailed in Schmidt. A multitude of clinical presentations have been reported with most highlighting the “waves” of muscular contractions and the intense and unceasing pain.
sbrothy said:... that according to Wikipedia the Bullet Ant (Paraponera cavata) is so called because its sting is comparable to being shot! Now, Wiki being Wiki, I thought this might be hyperbole and looking at a more serious paper, for which I'm afraid I don't have full access, I'm given a more measured comparison:
---- The Sting of the Ant, Paraponera clavata
As I don't have access to the full paper it might go on to specify differences based on geography and family. Another source has this to say:
---- A reexamination of poneratoxin from the venom of the bullet ant Paraponera clavata (Citations removed by me).
Again it's behind a paywall, but I'm not altogether convinced that the name isn't apt....
(Now, I did actually search the forum for both it's common and Latin names but came up short. I hope it isn't a double.)
collinsmark said:Here's a related video by Matt Parker's Stand-up Maths. (Most people on PF are familiar with Matt Parker from his semi-comedic, math videos [he's also been on Numberphile several times]). This video is about pain scales, but it features the "bullet ant."
Think big, dude.sbrothy said:… that a male blue whale ejaculates on average 20 litres!
I really wish I could unread that. The next best thing being sharing the pain with you. That may sound a little thin given the name of the site where I read it:
https://baleinesendirect.org/en/how-much-sperm-does-a-blue-whale-ejaculate/
Pop Science Article: https://www.heise.de/news/Ursache-u...e-laeuft-eine-gigantische-Welle-10690112.htmlA gigantic wave runs through the Milky Way, causing countless stars to rise or fall considerable distances. A research group discovered this using data from ESA's Gaia space telescope. It resembles a pond whose surface has been set vibrating by a stone, except that the gigantic wave in the Milky Way extends across large parts of the outer disk of the galaxy. Its cause is completely unclear, but it's conceivable that it stems from a collision with a dwarf galaxy, the research group writes. It's also possible that it's connected to a much smaller, wave-like gas structure dubbed the "Radcliffe wave." Both of these, however, still need to be investigated.
Knowledge is a good preventative.sbrothy said:Truly horrific! Especially as it could so easily have been avoided.
Yeah well, ironically the knowledge was there. Too bad the women never asked themselves why the scientists, and others "in the know", never visited the factory floor.BillTre said:Knowledge is a good preventative.
Well I guess they didn't know then.sbrothy said:Yeah well, ironically the knowledge was there. Too bad the women never asked themselves why the scientists, and others "in the know", never visited the factory floor.
Hah! Right you are! I guess the moral is that who knows is perhaps as important as knowing in the first place?BillTre said:Well I guess they didn't know then.
But formal drug trials are really something fairly recent post 1940 so if you want to find out how good a medicine was well give to patients and see what happens. Drug safety testing did not occur until 1938 when a sulfanilamide elixer killed 100 persons leading to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
---- https://www.physics.wisc.edu/2022/0...-milky-way-caused-by-supermassive-black-hole/The enormous clouds of material known as the eRosita and Fermi bubbles extend above and below the galactic plane of the Milky Way. NASA/KAREN YANG/MATEUSZ RUSZKOWSKI/ELLEN ZWEIBEL
Astronomer Ellen Zweibel. Zweibel is German for onion.sbrothy said:
One of those sounds good as a surname or family name and the other not so much.Hornbein said:Astronomer Ellen Zweibel. Zweibel is German for onion.