Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Playing Catch Up

            Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
THE DAY EARTH SMILED: NASA has begun sharing images of Earth taken by the Cassini spacecraft on Friday, July 19, which was also known as "Wave at Saturn" day. This one's my favorite so far. Look, there we are!! The bright white dot just below Saturn's (awesome!!!) rings. Can you see us smiling and waving - from 1.44 billion kilometers away?!

People on the West Coast of North American were supposed to look toward the eastern horizon at 2:30 p.m. and wave, so that's just what we did.

We were down at Seattle Center at the time. Here are the kids on the east side of the Space Needle, waving toward the horizon.
 And then we darted over to the arches at Pacific Science Center, and they waved from there, too!
You can read more about the raw Earth-moon image from Cassini, here.

These "Smile at Saturn" shots are are only the third-ever images of Earth from the outer solar system. Voyager 1 got the first Earth image from distant space, in 1990. Cassini shot the second, during an eclipse of the sun, in 2006.

Another cool shot Cassini sent back is this one - where you can see Earth and our moon!
Earth and its moon from Saturn
Earth is the blue point of light on the left; the moon is fainter, white, and on the right. Both are seen here through Saturn's diffuse E ring. Per NASA, "Images taken using red, green and blue spectral filters were combined to create this natural color view." The distance between Cassini and Earth was approximately 898.414 million miles at the time of the photo.
HELLO, BERTHA!: Saturday midday we headed down to the Sodo district to check out a construction project like no other. Later this month, the world's largest tunneling machine will begin eating away at the ground, creating a 1.7 mile long tunnel that runs from South Lake Union to the stadiums at the south end of town.

Here's a map of the route, on the floor of a place called Milepost 31, an information center on 1st Avenue at Main. It has displays about people and projects in Seattle's historic Pioneer Square.  
                 
From there, we were off to the actual site of the dig for an open house.

Before we went in, we had to sign waivers. CJ and Annabelle considered their legal rights carefully. I think they were the only two people in the crowd who actually read the poster!
We snaked through the crowd and caught snippets of Governor Jay Inslee and other politicians and project managers giving speeches ...
Eventually, we made our way to Bertha herself. My, what a big tunneling machine she is. The world's largest (in diameter) tunneling machine, to be exact. More than five stories of steel, right now she's situated in an 80-foot deep "launch pit."
She's names after Bertha Knight Landes, who was elected mayor of Seattle in 1926. Landes was the first woman to lead a major American city. Berth was built by Hitachi-Zosen in Japan, at a cost of $80 million.
 When she starts digging, there will be workers inside the 7,000 ton behemoth, monitoring the goings-on.  Bertha's 326-feet long, and stands 57.5 feet high.
http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/Projects/Viaduct/About/FollowBertha

We also had a chance to sign our names on a tunnel liner segment. So years from now, when we're driving through that tunnel, we'll know the names of MPA alums are there somewhere!

Here's a cool animation which shows how the machine will work.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guWkPRReUaE#action=share

You can find an interactive map of the project and some of its components here:  http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/projects/viaduct/Traffic/MP31Flash

Once the digging starts later this month, progress of about 6 feet per day is expected.

STATION TO STATION: On the way back to our car after bidding adieu to Bertha, we stopped in King Street Station. We did so because Friday night after the McCartney concert, everyone had to go to the bathroom and I suggested ducking into the train station which, fortunately, was open past its advertised hours.

When we walked in I was stunned at how gorgeous the place was. Replete with marble columns, a mosaic on the floor and lovely fixtures, I kept saying "this is amazing, this is amazing" while frantically looking for a bathroom. The station certainly didn't look anything like the run down, kind of sketchy place I recalled from years ago.

We made a note to revisit the station soon, and followed up on that the very next day.
This compass rose is right in the lobby.

I loved the view toward the King Street exit .
I love the round interior windows. They're so ornate and unnecessary. :)
Turns out King Street Station, built in 1906, is just coming off a $50 (!!) million dollar restoration. Turns out the city bought the building from Burlington Northern Santa Fe in 2008. That was news to me.

The Seattle Department of Transportation has a Web site about the project, with lots of before, during and after images here: http://www.seattle.gov/transportation/kingstreet.htm

Monday, July 22, 2013

One for the Ages


MAYBE I'M AMAZED:  How to put this? Friday night was The Best Friday Night in the History of Friday Nights. We saw Sir Paul McCartney rock Seattle with a three hour set of music spanning five decades.

But, it didn't start out so swell. 

First, we had an appointment at Pacific Science Center on Friday afternoon as part of the focus/study group we're a part of there to give feedback on "The Studio" part of their Wellbody Academy. 

So, we checked out their new exhibit on neuroscience. Including a cool, interactive close up of a mouse's brain subjected to some sound waves (the green 'noise').
There was also a fun biofeedback game where the most relaxed (as measured per brain waves) person won. 

That was all well and good and interesting, of course, but on the way home from Pacific Science Center 'round 4 p.m. we noticed that traffic southbound, into town, was bad. Epic-ly, horribly, bad. Like I've never seen in in the 5+ year we've been here. We rebooted our plans and basically left as soon as we got home (and picked up RIck and Ken).

We headed toward Safeco Field, the site of Friday night's Paul McCartney concert, at 5 p.m. We were in the car for 75 minutes for what is usually a 10-minute trip. It was horribly frustrating, needless to say. 

We finally parked about three blocks north of King Street Station around 6:15, and started walking south. Our plan was to catch dinner at a restaurant near Safeco Field before the show but we eyeballed lines and called a few places and all the waits for a table were 2+ hours - well beyond show time. So guess what/ The kids had hot dogs from a street vendor for dinner and they loved them and we saved lots of money. Win!

We headed into the stadium shortly after 6:30 and made our way to our seats. 
If it were a baseball game, we would have had some of the best seats in the house. But for this particular occasion - the first big concert in the history of Safeco Field! - we had the kind of cheapish-seats. But still, they were fantastic!!! We had one of the big ol' speaker trees pointing right at us, and the stage had a couple of huge screens showing us closeups of all the action, so no complaints here! 
Kennedy and Abby were up on the landing by he left field foul pole. Can you spot him waving at us?
Paul opened with "8 Days a Week" and that started our journey to Nirvana (no pun intended).

I'm 47 years old and have been going to lots o' concerts since I was 12. I've seen icons like David Bowie, Queen and Lou Reed multiple times. I've seen The Hottest New Band too many times to count. 

True confession time, I'm a HUGE Wings fan, and a BIG TIME John Lennon fan, but not so much a Beatles fan. But this was the best show ever. I mean like EVER Ever. CrAzY gOoD. Three hours of wall to wall waves of music that overwhelmed all of us present. Seriously, the Seattle show created so much buzz (people posting on social media DID YOU SEE THAT?!?!?) that by Sunday morning Paul McCartney was trending in the top 10 nationwide for Internet searches. 

Wasn't it nice of Sir Paul to use University of Washington Husky colors during the concert in Seattle? ;)
For the record, here's a set list. 
There were too many high points to count. Hell, the whole thing is a high point. Case in point- read the Seattle Times' sports editors' take on it ...  Or the Seattle Times music critics' review. The bottom line is, it was pure magic, from the first chord to the last. 

Sir Paul wowed on piano ...
 On guitar ...
on ukelele (during a special tribute to George Harrison), and on bass, of course.

The kids (pictured here, looking awkward) LOVED the show. 
Seriously, when Paul and friends started singing "All My Loving," they started squealing like Ed Sullivan circa 1964!

At one point during the show, I looked over at CJ and he looked absolutely stricken. 

Alarmed, I asked him, "What's wrong?!" 

"I'm trying not to cry," he managed to choke out. No wonder. Paul had just finished singing, "Here Today," a song he wrote about what he would have said to John Lennon, had he had the chance. Heartbreaking.

I managed to maintain my composure, until Paul went and sang "The Long and Winding Road" followed by "Maybe I'm Amazed," which, he noted, was written for his late wife, Linda. It ripped my heart out, in the best way. 
The largest visual spectacle of the night was during "Live and Let Die." 


If you look at the bottom of the picture above, you can see Paul in his white shirt crouched, ears covered, during the explosions!

We'd studied up on "Out There" tour set lists before the Friday night show, so I could make sure the kids knew and enjoyed the songs, but Seattle's set list was special. For instance, after morphing "Let Me Roll It" into "Foxy Lady," Paul talked about what a "sweet guy" Jimi Hendrix was, and how cool it was to hear Hendrix had performed "Sgt. Pepper's" live just two days after it was released way back when.

The concert was amazing, but the encore was ridiculous. Wait, what, who's this joining The Fab One on stage? Well it's Dave Grohl, Krist Novoselic and Pat Smear, the surviving members of Nirvana. That's when the concert switched from epic to sublime. (See Dave behind Paul?!) 
"Sirvana" was mind blowingly amazing. I mean, totally "Out There,"  per the name of Paul's tour.

They played ... 
  1. "Cut Me Some Slack"
  2. "Get Back"
    • Encore 2
  3. "Yesterday"
  4. "Long Tall Sally"
  5. "Helter Skelter"
  6. "Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight/The End"

"Cut Me Some Slack," (written by Grohl and McCartney for Sound City documentary) was hardcore old school rock, and "Helter Skelter" ran off the rails, just the way John Lennon would have loved.

All in all, an epic, Epic EPIC night. 

Thursday, July 18, 2013

SMILE FOR THE CAMERA: Don't forget, tomorrow afternoon marks the photobombing opportunity of a lifetime! 

Photos of the Earth taken from from the outer solar system are rare. The most famous is the "Pale Blue Dot" shot of 23 years ago, by Voyager 1, from 4 billion miles away.  Friday afternoon, there'll be another shot. 


Instead of regurgitating the facts, I'm just going to include most of NASA's well written press release on the topic below.
PASADENA, Calif. -- Two NASA spacecraft, one studying the Saturn system, the other observing Mercury, are maneuvering into place to take pictures of Earth on July 19 and 20.
The image taken from the Saturn system by NASA's Cassini spacecraft will occur between 2:27 and 2:42 p.m. PDT (5:27 and 5:42 p.m. EDT, or 21:27 and 21:47 UTC) Friday, July 19. Cassini will be nearly 900 million miles (nearly 1.5 billion kilometers) away from Earth. NASA is encouraging the public to look and wave in the direction of Saturn at the time of the portrait and share their pictures via the Internet.
The Cassini Earth portrait is part of a more extensive mosaic -- or multi-image picture -- of the Saturn system as it is backlit by the sun. The viewing geometry highlights the tiniest of ring particles and will allow scientists to see patterns within Saturn's dusty rings. Processing of the Earth images is expected to take a few days, and processing of the full Saturn system mosaic will likely take several weeks. ...
Details on how to find Saturn in the sky and participate in the event are available at: http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/waveatsaturn .
The public can share pictures by using the hashtag #waveatsaturn on Twitter, or uploading pictures to the event's Flickr page at:http://www.flickr.com/groups/wave_at_saturn/ .
the event's Facebook page is: http://bit.ly/waveatsaturn .
I found a blog that gives the most straightfoward instructions regarding where to look "at" Saturn at the appointed time (you won't really be able to see it, of course). Go here: http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/news/waveatsaturn/viewing/

The bottom line: For those in the west, you should wave at Saturn very low on the eastern horizon from 2:27 to 2:42 p.m. PDT. (That's right, you have to wave for 15 minutes straight! Ha ha, just kidding. Do whatever feels right for you.)
Location of Saturn in the sky in Los Angeles on July 19, 2013
Image courtesy: NASA/JPL

We'll certainly be doing it - from the grounds of Seattle Center, as we have a 3 p.m. appointment there tomorrow afternoon for the exhibit feedback study group we're in at Pacific Science Center.

The nice NASA folks have even come up with an interface so that you can print out your official "I Waved at Saturn" certificate. Go here: http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/news/waveatsaturn/certificate/


BRITISH INVASION: We've been counting down the days until Sir Paul McCartney's concert at Safeco Field on Friday night.

It's exciting for a number of reasons, the most obvious reason being, well, it's Paul McCartney. ;) But another reason the event will be special is because it's the first full blown concert at Safeco Field - which is kind of hard to believe given that the stadium opened in 1999, 14 years ago.  The Seattle Times had a front page story about it yesterday. It's a pretty Big Darn Deal.

I had the kids read the story so they can better appreciate all the work that's going on behind the scenes in order to make their Friday night memorable.

We also watched the BrainPOP movie about The Beatles (a BrainPOP subscription is required). From it, the kids learned a bit about The Beatles roots and their discography, as well as the British Invasion in general. 

After the BrainPOP video, the kids took a related quiz, and then completed an activity called 'Analyze It." They had to read lyrics from "I'm Looking Through You" and "Eleanor Rigby" and give their own interpretations of what they meant.  

The BrainPOP video made mention of the Beatles' debut appearance in 1964 on the Ed Sullivan show. Of course, we had to find that on YouTube. The video we watched has been nicely remastered. The kids loved it.


ON THE PAD: It's a little early for most West Coasters, but if you're up early Friday morning, you an watch the launch of a pretty United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket from Cape Canaveral. On board is the the U.S. Navy's second Mobile User Objective System (MUOS-2). The launch window is 5:48-6:32 a.m. PDT on Friday, July 19.
Built by Lockeed Hartin, the MUOS-2 will provide narrowband tactical communications for U.S. forces on the move. 

Here's a video of technicians encapsulating the satellite inside a ULA Atlas V 5-meter diameter payload fairing.


Spaceflight now will have live, streaming coverage of the event, and updates prior. Check it out here: 
http://www.spaceflightnow.com/atlas/av040/status.html

BALANCING ACT: Our progress in "The Science of Gastronomy" continues. This morning's lectures were about balancing tastes and flavors and the infinite possibilities for combining them. 


Professor King explaned how taste inhibitors and enhancers work. For instance, we learned that adding salt to something can enhance its sweetness and inhibit sour notes; adding acid to something enhances the salty taste, and sugar inhibits both salt and bitter taste.   

For our homework today, we had to whip up five liquid concoctions: 

Drink A: 1 teaspoon of vinegar into 100 ml of water
Drink B: 1 teaspoon of vinegar and 1/8 teaspoon of sugar into 100 ml of water
Drink C: 1 teaspoon of vinegar and 1/4 teaspoon of sugar into 100 ml of water
Drink D: 1 teaspoon of vinegar and 1/2 teaspoon of sugar into 100 ml of water
Drink E: 1 teaspoon of vinegar and 1 teaspoon of sugar into 100 ml of water
The trepidation grew as we did the mixing. "It seems disgusting, drinking vinegar, to me," CJ weighed in. But being the good researcher he is, CJ soldiered through tasting all of the solutions. Heck, by the time we got to Drink D, CJ wanted more than one sip. :)

WHAT A DIFFERENCE TWO DAYS MAKES: I've been experimenting around with kale smoothies the past couple of days. The first day (kale, strawberries, and Greek yogurt), as you might recall, was an abject failure. Yesterday was better. I used less kale (the first day I had waaaay too much by any recipe you'll find), and used watermelon instead of strawberries, and that helped. Today, using info I've gleaned from our gastronomy class, BTW, I opted for a healthy mountain of kale complimented with a big banana, nonfat Greek yogurt and a teaspoon of organic honey. Miraculously, when Annabelle saw the ingredients, she asked, "Can I like the spoon?" 

Naturally, I gave her a spoonful and offered up more in her own cup.  

"Man, this kale smoothie is good! And that, coming from a kid, is amazing," was her review.  

Hearing that, CJ wanted in on the action, of course. He ran and fetched a cup and approached me, asking, "May I have a kale smoothie, please?" Naturally, I was happy to oblige. I poured a nice helping from my cup to his. He chugged it down and declared, "One thing I'll say is it's definitely better than the first one." 
They both gave an enthusiastic 'yes!' when I asked them if they'd be interested in drinking it again. Sweet Smoothie Success!

PANDA CAM: Zoo Atlanta has a new pair of giant panda cubs! Their mother is 15-year old Lun Lun. 

Wonderful photo by: Curt http://www.flickr.com/photos/curt/566225918/?reg=1&src=comment

The cubs, both boys, are the first giant panda twins to be born in the U.S. since 1987.  

You can watch the action (well mostly lots of inaction, but it's still interesting) here: http://www.zooatlanta.org/1212/panda_cam

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Wednesday

ON THE TIPS OF OUR TONGUES: The blackberries are here, the blackberries are here!

Well, at least a few of them - but a few is better than none! Today, CJ and Annabelle strained to reach some growing on a steep hillside by the ballfield at Bayview Park.

Later tonight, the tastebuds were put to use again as we completed an assignment for our "Science of Gastronomy" course.

Tonight professor King spoke volumes about how we taste and what we taste (yes, including umami). We learned lots about the types and locations of taste of receptors in our body. The professor also covered the topic of "supertasters." CJ reminded us that at the Seattle Science Expo a month or so ago, there was a booth there with a banner that asked, "Are you a supertaster?" We were each given strips to taste. Annabelle and Christian tasted nothing but the paper of the strip, while CJ and I winced at its bitterness. Turns out we're supertasters (along with about 25 percent of the population, and more women than men are supertasters). It's a genetic. thought to be related to the presence of the TAS2R38 gene, specifically. 

We also learned lots about saliva - how it's made and what its functions (as transportation, a solvent, protection, and more) are. And we learned why you should wash capsaicin-laced foods down with full fat milk (it's soluble in lipids) instead of beer (alcohol can make it seem hotter!).

Our assignment tonight was to dry all the saliva off our tongues and then try to taste salt or sugar. Surprise, surprise, it had a nearly imperceptible taste. Then, we repeated the taste with a 'normal' (not dry) mouth and, of course, we could taste the sugar or salt, no problem. Well done, saliva, well done.
BUDDING ARTIST: Annabelle spends a fair amount of time most every day drawing. Often it's crayon or pencil on paper, often it's with graphic software. I've been super impressed with her (self taught) progress as of late. For instance, here is a progression of a baby shark she drew and then colored.

And here's a turtle. 

MATHS: This week I started an online class from Stanford called "How to Learn Math." So far, it's absolutely riveting. Professor Jo Boaler has made a career out of studying math teaching and discerning why math evokes such strong negative feelings for so many. There's a nice overview article about the class here: https://ed.stanford.edu/news/new-online-course-learning-love-math. I'm one of 20,000+ parents/teachers enrolled.

Boaler's class seems very necessary when you start reading about students experiences in and perceptions about math education. For example, one survey of adults found that four out of 10 hated math in school, twice as many as any other subject. Yowza.

I'd highly recommend anyone who is in a position to teach or help anyone in math to check it out. The lectures are anything but the standard dry sermons. They are sprinkled with interviews with students and other math experts, and along the way there are short, relevant assignments. The ones so far are largely based on the course taker's observations and experiences - in other words, there's no long hard math quiz or final to worry about! ;)

One of our assignments asked us to make a concept map of themes we heard emerging from interviews with students about their feelings toward math. Here's what I came up with.


This fall, Boaler will be offering a version of the course for kids ages 10-ish in the upcoming school year. I know a couple of students who will be enrolled!

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Taste Sensations

MEAN GREEN: I've been threatening to make a kale smoothie (it's all the rage) for days now. This morning, we finally got 'round to it.

It looked so pretty sitting there in the food processor, with the bright red berries, creamy Greek yogurt and crunchy green kale. We gave it a good spin, and I poured the concoction into three cups.

I tasted it first, with my back to the kids, as I didn't want to pollute their palates. Good thing my back was to them, as I'm sure I grimaced. Not deterred, I gave them a hard sell, telling them to drink up the glorious elixir. 

Here's Annabelle's face at first taste.
And CJ looked like this. 
Sorry the photo is blurry. He was shuddering violently. Once he could talk, CJ spat out, ""Oh my, this tastes bad. What kind of abomination is this?"

And so, our first foray into the world of drinking your kale was a rather miserable failure. I will not be deterred. Stay tuned for Round 2.

TO THE MOON: On this day in history (July 16), Apollo 11 lifted off from Cape Canaveral. A towering craft at 363-feet tall, it was the summer of '69 and on board were astronauts Neil A. Armstrong, Michael Collins, and Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., (you can call him Buzz). 
(credit:NASA-KSC)
(credit:NASA-KSC)

Four days later, Neil and Buzz were walking on the moon. 

RED PLANET POETRY: A couple weeks back, the kids and I got in on a NASA promotion to have our names on board their MAVEN spacecraft, which will be Mars-bound after its launch this November. However, getting our names on board came with a catch. We had to submit a Mars-inspired haiku, as well. 

Here's Annabelle's:
Fourth in our system
The red one floats in orbit
We come to explore
And CJ's:
Do you have life there?
That is what I wonder now
We cannot stop here
And mine
Mysterious Mars
Our rusty, dusty neighbor
Enchanting you are
Now, the public can vote on their favorite haikus. (You can vote for us by clicking on the embedded links with our names, above). There were nearly 30,000 haikus submitted, so I'm pretty sure John Q. Public isn't going to read all of them. Or even 100 of them. They'll probably read a page or two of them, and cast a couple votes. Our haikus are very near the last of thousands of pages, and we're not social media gurus, so we're not thinking we're going to win that contest. ;) But the way I see it, we've already won, as our names will be rocketing toward Mars come fall. (Incidentally, our names are already ON Mars, as we participated in a get your name on board program for Mars Science Laboratory ("Curiosity"), as well.

And speaking of Mars, right now Curiosity is on a Red Planet road trip. It started on July 4 is heading for Mount Sharp, a Martian mountain that rises 3.4 miles high (about the same as Mt. Rainier). The rover isn't going to set any land speed records as its top speed is just .09 MPH (.14 KM/H). As of July 9, MSL has a total odometer reading of 325 feet since it touched down in early August of 2012. Mission managers estimate it will take Curiosity nearly a year to make the 5-mile trek to the mountain.
Lower slopes of Mount Sharp appear at the top of this image
This image from NASA/JPL-Caltech shows the turret of tools at the end of Curiosity's robotic arm. The rover's rock-sampling drill in the lower left corner of the image. You can see the lower slopes of Mount Sharp at the top of the photo.

TASTE TEST: As previously mentioned, we've started our "Science of Gastronomy" course through Coursera. One of our Week 1 assignments was doing an experiment that involved a 'taste map' of our tongues.
We were to use cotton swabs to apply four different mixtures (sweet, salty, bitter [cocoa powder], sour [vinegar]) to four different regions of our tongues and then chart the intensity of the taste. 
It was a fun exercise, but it's not an exact science. In fact, the 'fact' that different sections of the tongue are exclusively responsible for registering different basic tastes has been debunked in recent years

Monday, July 15, 2013

Sun City

SUN DAY: All day Saturday we worked around the house and yard, except for an hour or so in the morning when we went for a nice long walk and spotted our first blackberry of the season! There are thousands to come, no doubt. 

Come Sunday, I was itching to go to the Mariners' game. I kept my eye on Craigslist and Stubhub, but couldn't find tickets at my 'give' point  ($15 apiece, half face value), until about 2 hours and 5 minutes before first pitch, a trio popped up on Stubhub. We jumped on them (only $12.83 apiece!) and then bought our fourth from a scalper at the same price point. Sweet! 

It was a LOVELY day at the park. Heaven on Earth, really.
A foul pole never looked so lovely, right? ;)
FUZZY WUZZY: This weekend, a Facebook friend turned me us on to some live bear cams. First, was a cam trained on Alaska's Brooks River in Katmai National Park. There, each year, over a hundred brown bears descend on a mile long stretch of Brooks River to chow down on the largest Sockeye Salmon run in the world. It's very entertaining to watch. I find myself switching between rooting for the bears and the salmon.

From the site above, I noticed the site had lots of other wildlife live cam links. For instance, one of polar bear Ilka and her twin cubs at Scandinavian Wildlife Park in Denmark. 

TASTY: This evening, we completed week 1 of "The Science of Gastronomy," a Coursera course via The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. Here's our campus. ...
Well, at least virtually. But isn't it LOVELY? Maybe we can see it for ourselves some day...In the meantime, our professor's name is King, which you have to love. :) So far, so good - we've already learned lots!

For instance, we've learned about how energy can be transferred through conduction, comparing heat capacity and heat conductance, cooking by convection, increasing the boiling point of water with salt or sugar, cooking by radiation and more. 

One of the lectures we watched demonstrated how different materials conduct heat, which speaks to choices when it comes to cooking vessels. The charts and examples showed us that metals conduct heat significantly better than ceramics and plastics. 

We decided to replicate the experiment on our own. 
We put two ice cubes in small plastic bags, and set them on four different surfaces: ceramic, plastic, foil and copper. After five minutes, it was clear to see the copper and foil samples were melting more quickly.
Afer 10 minutes they looked like this. They are from left to right ceramic, plastic, foil and copper. As you can see, the copper cubes were completely melted. Amazing! Science! Woot!
This first weeks' lessons also touched upon hunger and satiety. The lectures covered why we need food, how we determine whether we're full or not, how we determine if food is good, and how sound, texture and the other senses play into our eating experiences. Interesting stuff that we can use every darn day.

One of our assignments this week had to do with sensory specific satiety. It involved eating a 'meal' of chocolate. Ten bites of chocolate, spread out over 30 minutes. Pure torture. ;)"I think this is my favorite quiz ever," Annabelle remarked after 'having' to eat and rate her second piece.

The exercise involved rating the level of "pleasantness of item one after eating," and then the pleasantness" of pieces 2-10. Won't surprise \you to learn the 'pleasantness' went down with successive pieces. Chocolate is good, but it turns out there *is* such a thing as too much of a good thing.