Mechanical Fault with Toyota Avensis

Fellow CR4 members,

About four months ago, I discovered that my car was not firing well. I met my local mechanic who diagnosed faults with two valves and burnt top gaskets. Valves were grinded, top gaskets changed and general servicing carried out including the nozzles.

After all t

Welded Base Plate

Hi,

We are in the process of fabricating saddles for LPG storage tanks. In this regards i want to ask a question regarding base plate. We want to weld two plates togeather to complete the overall length of the base plate. Weld seem will be in the middle of the base plate, lengthwise. there is a

Apollo-Soyuz: An Orbital Partnership Begins

Most of us take it for granted today that American astronauts and Russian cosmonauts live and work together in Earth orbit. They've been doing it for years, first in the Shuttle-Mir program, and now on the International Space Station.

But before the two Cold War-rivals first met in orbit in 1975, such a partnership seemed unlikely. Since Sputnik bleeped into orbit in 1957, the superpowers were driven by the Space Race, with the U.S. and then-Soviet Union driven more by competition than cooperation. When President Kennedy called for a manned moon landing in 1961, he spoke of "battle that is now going on around the world between freedom and tyranny" and referred to the "head start obtained by the Soviets with their large rocket engines."

Watch the Apollo-Soyuz docking and crew handshake:

But by the mid-70s things had changed. The U.S. had "won" the race to the Moon, with six Apollo landings between 1969 and 1972. Both nations had launched space stations, the Russian Salyut and American Skylab. With the Space Shuttle still a few years off and the diplomatic chill thawing, the time was right for a joint mission.

The Apollo-Soyuz Test Project would send NASA astronauts Tom Stafford, Deke Slayton and Vance Brand in an Apollo Command and Service Module to meet Russian cosmonauts Aleksey Leonov and Valeriy Kubasov in a Soyuz capsule. A jointly designed, U.S.-built docking module fulfilled the main technical goal of the mission, demonstrating that two dissimilar craft could dock in orbit. But the human side of the mission went far beyond that.

The training leading up to the mission exposed the two crews to each other's nations, helping to break down cultural and language barriers. As Brand said in a 2000 interview, amid the Cold War tensions, "we thought they were pretty aggressive people and ... they probably thought we were monsters. So we very quickly broke through that, because when you deal with people that are in the same line of work as you are, and you’re around them for a short time, why, you discover that, well, they're human beings."

In a 1997 interview, Stafford described how they got around the language problem. "Each crew would speak his own language, and the other would have to understand," he said. It just wasn't working, until Stafford and the Russian backup commander had the idea to speak in the other's language. "So we started," he said, "and boy, it worked slick as a whistle."

'Hello, Darlin'

On July 17, 1975, the five explorers and the two craft --launched two days before -- approached each other for docking. As Stafford guided the Apollo forward, Soyuz commander Leonov quipped "Tom, please don't forget about your engine." Just after noon on the East Coast in the U.S., with a live TV audience watching, the two craft finally met. "Soyuz and Apollo are shaking hands now."

A few hours later it was the crew members who were literally shaking hands, exchanging hugs and ceremonial gifts, including U.S., Soviet and United Nations flags, commemorative plaques, medallions, certificates and tree seeds.

The crews received a congratulatory message from Soviet premier Leonid Brezhnev and a phone call from U.S. President Gerald Ford, who joked with astronaut Slayton about being the "world's oldest space rookie."

President Ford calls the crew:

The 51-year old Slayton had been one of the "Original Seven" Mercury astronauts, but was grounded due to a heart condition. Finally cleared to fly on Apollo-Soyuz, Slayton reported, "it's been a great experience. I don't think there's any way anybody can express how beautiful it is up here."

Apollo Commander Stafford had another unique cultural exchange for the cosmonauts. He'd gotten country music star Conway Twitty to record "Privet Radost," a Russian version of his hit "Hello, Darlin'." About an hour before the two craft undocked, the song was played from orbit and heard all over the world. Mission Control quipped that it "sounded like it was from far Western Oklahoma, around Kiev."

The Apollo crew returned to Earth on July 19, their Russian counterparts two days later. It would be two decades until the countries teamed up again with the Shuttle-Mir program, but the seed was planted. As Brand said, "I really believe that we were sort of an example … to the countries. We were a little of a spark or a foot in the door that started better communications."

For more information visit http://www.nasa.gov/topics/history/features/astp_35.html

Service Temperature of Plastics

Manufacturer's data sheets for plastics do not normally give continuous and maximum intermittent service temperatures. These are essential figures when deciding on the right plastic for a particular job, particularly where high temperatures - say 150-200C are involved.

Is there any way of p

parallel piping system

i just want to know if in electrical circuit, the equivalent resistance of a parallel circuit is given by 1/Rp=1/(1/r1+1/r2+........1/rn). Then is this relation true for parallel piping also for finding equivalent pressure loss in a parallel piping system? since the parallel piping and parallel ele

Cognitive Psychology

Hello,

I am doing my project concerning the cognitive psychology approach in manufacturing and my problem is where can I get the information about the relationship between cognitive approach in manufacturing?

Thanks....

Press Brake Design and Build

Please advise as to how to build a hydraulic press brake. Ideal bed length 5 to 10 feet long. Capacity @ 100 tons. One or two hydraulic cylinder operation.

CR4 Admin - phone number and e-mail address removed

From the Site FAQ: Do not post phone numbers or email addresses. The CR4 A

Really fine grained genetic maps of Europe | Gene Expression

genmap1A few years ago you started seeing the crest of studies which basically took several hundred individuals (or thousands) from a range of locations, and then extracted out the two largest components of genetic variation from the hundreds of thousands of variants. The clusters which fell out of the genetic data, with each point being an individual’s position, were transposed onto a geographical map. The figure to the left (from this paper) is has been widely circulated. You don’t have to be a deep thinker to understand why things shake out this way; people are more closely related to those near than those far because gene flow ties populations together, and its power decreases as a function of distance.

Of course the world isn’t flat, and history perturbs regularities. Jews for example often don’t shake out where they “should” geographically, because of their historical mobility contingent upon random and often capricious geopolitical or social pressures. The Hazara of Afghanistan have their ethnogenesis in the melange of peoples who were thrown together after the Mongol conquest of Central Asia and Iran in the 13th century, and the subsequent collapse of the Ilkhan dynasty. Though the Hazara have mixed with their Persian, Tajik and Pashtun neighbors, they still retain a strong stamp of Mongolian ancestry which means that they are at some remove on the “genetic map” from their geographical neighbors.


So when interpreting these sorts of results you have two extreme dynamics operative. On the one hand you have an equilibrium state where gene flow is mediated through continuous but small flows of migration; women moving between villages, younger sons venturing out of the village in search of better opportunities. Then you have the random (or perhaps modeled as a poisson distribution) “shocks” which are attributed to world-historical (or region-historical) events which leave an outsized and often perplexing stamp and distort the genetic map from the geographic one. Sometimes the two are not in balance. In much of the New World and Australasia the native populations were genetically replaced by settlers from the outside. Thousands of years of genetic variation accumulated and shaped by localized gene flow events were wiped clean off the map by the demographic tsunami.

Obviously that’s an extreme scenario. The macroscale does not always render the microscale irrelevant in such a fashion. A new short paper in The European Journal of Human Genetics gives us an example. Genes predict village of origin in rural Europe:

The genetic structure of human populations is important in population genetics, forensics and medicine. Using genome-wide scans and individuals with all four grandparents born in the same settlement, we here demonstrate remarkable geographical structure across 8–30?km in three different parts of rural Europe. After excluding close kin and inbreeding, village of origin could still be predicted correctly on the basis of genetic data for 89–100% of individuals.

Here’s the ubiquitous PC chart, except on the scale of villages:

village1

As noted above they excluded close relatives, out to second cousins. They judge the genetic time depth is about ~120 years into the past back to the common ancestry. Remember that if their grandparents are from this village they obviously are going to be somewhat inbred, from the perspective of an American whose ancestors are from different nations. But for most of history the European case was the typical one, not the American one where people from different continents mingled.

Here’s part of the discussion which I think needs highlighting:

To explore how many markers are required to recover these fine scale patterns of structure, we ranked SNPs by FST among villages and repeated the PCA for the most differentiated subsets of 30?000, 10?000, 3000 and 300 SNPs in each population. In all three populations, 10?000 or more high FST SNPs recovered an essentially identical picture to that using the full data set, and even 3000 SNPs preserved considerable separation between the villages (not shown). Using only the most discriminating 300 SNPs, little structure could be observed between the two Croatian villages; however, in Scotland and Italy one of the three settlements included in each location remained completely differentiated from the other two (not shown). We note that these results are only indicative of the minimum number of SNPs required to separate these populations, as by necessity SNPs have been selected intrinsically on the basis of FST within the same data set, rather than extrinsically from other data.

The slightly lower differentiation of the Croatian villages is not surprising given the fact that they are physically the closest of those considered here, being 8?km apart, with only low hills separating them. In contrast, the settlements in the Scottish Isles and Italy are separated by 15–30?km of sea in the former case, and of 3000?m mountains in the latter, although there are deep connecting valleys.

First, we get a sense of the range of informative markers necessary to discern population structure well in much of the Old World. For continental races (e.g., Europeans vs. East Asians) you need on the order of 10-100 markers to distinguish them with a high degree of confidence (closer to the low bound than the high). It looks like in the case of village vs. village differences, it will be on the order of 100-1000 markers. I suspect in Iraq or the Caucasus you’ll need less than 300 markers, because genetic differentiation is higher over a shorter distance due to inbreeding, ethnic diversity, and geography (more the former in Iraq, more the latter in the Caucasus). In contrast, in regions where geography is conducive to transport and local norms enforce exogamy I wouldn’t be surprised if you need more like a thousand markers.

Second, observe the importance of topographical detail. I have observed before than Sardinia is a genetic outlier in Europe. That’s not because Sardinians interbred with native elves of that island. Rather, a water barrier serves as a major check on continuous gene flow mediated by banal contacts (e.g., going to the market and meeting a person from the neighboring village). Islands become worlds unto themselves. Though they are effected by the exogenous shocks, they are less subject to the continuous gene flow at the equilibrium because the water serves as a barrier. Similarly mountains can produce genetic barriers as well, because they make travel rather difficult. In Consanguinity, Inbreeding, and Genetic Drift in Italy L. L. Cavalli-Sforza documents in detail through Roman Catholic Church records what a big impact modern roads had on inbreeding coefficients, which plunged in the 19th century. Distortions of the genetic map tells about variations in elevation in the third dimension on the geographic map!

The utility of this sort of data collection and analysis in the modern world is an empirical question. On the one hand many Europeans are relatively less inclined to move in comparison to Americans. And yet the breaking down of borders with the European Union and the likely need for a more productive economic sector on that continent because of changing demographics point to greater mobility, migration and mixing, which would make these sorts of studies of only near-term use. Of more interest to me are going to be fine-grained analyses of social groups. For example the Indian caste system. Last fall in the Reich et al. paper the authors seemed to be indicating the likelihood of a lot of between population variance groups these groups. It doesn’t matter if a particular Bania sub-caste from Gujarat is scattered across the world, from Kenya to England to the United States. They may all still marry amongst a set of individuals who hale from the same original few villages.

Good times.

Citation: O’Dushlaine, C., McQuillan, R., Weale, M., Crouch, D., Johansson, Aulchenko, Y., Franklin, C., Polašek, O., Fuchsberger, C., Corvin, A., Hicks, A., Vitart, V., Hayward, C., Wild, S., Meitinger, T., van Duijn, C., Gyllensten, U., Wright, A., Campbell, H., Pramstaller, P., Rudan, I., & Wilson, J. (2010). Genes predict village of origin in rural Europe European Journal of Human Genetics DOI: 10.1038/ejhg.2010.92

A Hint of Things to Come?

I was struck by an article on the website of the San Francisco Chronicle that reports for the first time that workers age 65 and over outnumber employed teenagers: http://tinyurl.com/27opz5h.  There are a variety of factors at work here, including unfortunately the devastating effect of the recession on the work opportunities for young people.  The impact of the economy on investment portfolios and real estate values have undoubtedly caused people over age 65 to reconsider their need to continue to work. 

There has been speculation for some time that some aging Baby Boomers would prefer to continue to work past normal retirement age.  A variety of news reports coming out of Washington over the past several weeks also indicate that deficit reduction negotiations that are likely to begin in the fall may lead to increases in the normal retirement age within the Social Security program sometime in the future.  There’s a strong likelihood that the newly identified workforce trend marks the beginning of a tendency to see employment as a key component for financing longevity regardless of whether the trend is fostered by personal preference or by retirement plan formulas.

6 (reasonable) things to do in a doctor’s waiting room

1. Make a list of your top health concerns.

2. Write questions down.

3. Make a list of all your medications.

4. Ask the office to check on your test results.

5. Confirm that the office has the correct insurance information.

6. Read something besides the magazines.

References:
6 things to do in a doctor’s waiting room. ConsumerReportsHealth.org.

Image source: picturestation.net, free license.

Posted at Clinical Cases and Images. Stay updated and subscribe, follow us on Twitter and connect on Facebook.


Frog Dissection iPad Application

Remember high school Biology where you had to dissect a frog? Now you can dissect a frog as often as you want on your iPad. Assuming you have an iPad. And assuming you want to relive high school.

Above is an instructional video on how to use the application. (Sorry, but I can not get behind the whole “app” thing. It’s application.) I saw this reported on Vegansauras and they linked it from a vegetarian author on Gizmodo, and I guess considering so many kids option out of dissecting frogs, this is a helpful application. You can learn about the frog’s anatomy without actually killing one.

iPad frog dissection app

I was not a vegetarian when I had to do this in high school, nor was I particularly conscious of animal welfare, but I had a hard time doing the dissecting. This seems like a useful tool.

So, is Apple donating a ton of iPads to schools, or what?

Tattoo Collection, Department of Forensic Medicine at Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland



I just stumbled upon a pretty incredible "photo story" documenting a collection of tattoos found in the Department of Forensic Medicine at Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland. The images above are all drawn from the photo essay; below is an excerpt from the very interesting article which accompanies the images:

Preserving the Criminal Code
Photo Stories
Katarzyna Mirczak

The tattoo collection at the Department of Forensic Medicine at Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland consists of 60 objects preserved in formaldehyde, a method devised by one of the experts employed by the Department at the turn of 20th century.

The tattoos were collected from the prisoners of the nearby state penitentiary on Montelupich Street as well as from the deceased on whom autopsies were performed.

The majority of the prison tattoos represent connections between the convicts. Besides gestures and mimics it is a kind of secret code – revealing why 'informative' tattoos appeared on uncovered body parts: face, neck or arms.

The collection was created with a view to deciphering the code – among prisoners known as a 'pattern language'. By looking closely at the prisoners' tattoos, their traits, temper, past, place of residence or the criminal group in which they were involved could be determined.

In Poland, tattoos are common among criminals. Traditionally, they could be found on people who exhibited a tendency towards perverse behaviour: such as burglars, thieves, rapists and pimps. It was noticed that a significant percentage of tattooed people showed signs of personality disorders and aggressive behaviour. In the 1960s in Poland, getting a prison tattoo required special skills and criminal ambition – it was a kind of ennoblement, each tattoo in the criminal world was meaningful...

The entire photo story, with the full article and image collection (highly recommended!), can be found by clicking here; text and images by Katarzyna Mirczak as published on the Foto8 website.

PS: If you are interested in this topic, then you certainly won't want to miss our upcoming Observatory lecture "Morbid Ink: Field Notes on the Human Memorial Tattoo" with Dr. John Troyer, Deputy Director, Centre for Death and Society, University of Bath next Tuesday, July 20th. More on that event here.

Ideas wanted: Seasteading Book PR

Would love help coming up with media contacts for the upcoming seasteading book - people who could review it & get the word out especially. Ideally we can find a wide variety of people in a variety of forums, each of whom has written something that indicates they are philosophically aligned with seasteading. Would be awesome if those of y'all who read a lot of blogs/press or network a lot with media types would bookmark this page and make use of it over the coming months :). This is an experiment in crowdsourcing more of our research - we'll see how it goes!

read more

VIETNAM 12051 Hello from Hanoi

AUTHOR'S NOTE I decided to post my past travel journals with a few related pics. They are an interesting if amusing read. The first set is from my trip to Vietnam in Christmas of 2005. I sent them as emails to my mom and other friends and family. Please forgive grammarpunctuation errors Hi there I am emailing you from my second night in Hanoi...if you count the travel night as the first.

VIETNAM 12055…Final days in Nam

Hi all Well this is it...the final chapter of my first and hopefully not last visit to Vietnam. As it goes now I am emailing from a Kiosk in Narita Japan killing time on my eight hour layover. I left Vietnam at around midnight on December 30th and will be arriving in LAX at 730 AM on December 30th. The last two day in Vietnam were once again unique and special. On December 28th Chris a

Water water everywhere…

July 12Woke up this morning cold isn't really gettin any better I'm afraid. Ah well. If I don't get to sing in the competition I won't be particularly devastated I've got to admit. The stress here is starting to wear on everyone.This morning some of us went on a really great walking tour of Venice and while it wasn't quite as informative as I would have liked there were some really interest

VIETNAM 12054 Hoian and Back

Hello All Well the highlight of the last few days was talking to my family on the holidays. Technology is amazing. These emails alone are cool but being able to talk through the internet for less than 1USD for five minutes was quite a treat. Fortunately I awoke early on the 26th and was able to place calls beginning at 700 am...2pm USA west coast time. I was on my third and final call when

HindiSpeaking YogaDoing Vidyarthi

Well I just typed out a really super lengthy blog but it disappeared when I tried to post it. Let me have a moment grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.Letrsquos try this again.It is a rainy misty cloudy day here in Mussoorie and before there were monkeys outside the window. But not now momentrsquos gone. There are a lot of monkeys here and they just look at you while you pant up the hill to cl