MSU students honored by chemistry department – Springfield News-Leader

Subscribe today for full access on your desktop, tablet, and mobile device.

Let friends in your social network know what you are reading about

The Chemistry Recognition Banquet is held annually and awards which range from fellowships to scholarships.

Try Another

Audio CAPTCHA

Image CAPTCHA

Help

CancelSend

A link has been sent to your friend's email address.

A link has been posted to your Facebook feed.

News-Leader 4:29 p.m. CT May 17, 2017

File Art(Photo: News-leader)Buy Photo

Students in the department of chemistry at Missouri State University recently attended the annual Chemistry Recognition Banquet in April.

Stephanie Dannen, a senior chemistry major from Seymour, received the Dr. Martin Research Fellowship, the Emil Lorz Memorial Scholarship and a Department of Chemistry Board of Advisers Summer Research Fellowship.

Brennon Foster, a senior biochemistry major from Springfield, received the Outstanding Physical Chemistry Student Award, the Outstanding Senior Award from the chemistry department and the Graduating Senior Award from the Midwest District of Kappa Kappa Psi.

Bryttani West, a senior chemistry major from Springfield, received the American Chemical Society Undergraduate Award in Inorganic Chemistry.

For more information visitThe College of Natural and Applied Sciences.

Read or Share this story: http://sgfnow.co/2rsm9ct

6:20

1:35

3:31

0:55

1:35

1:44

0:40

0:43

2:33

1:01

Read this article:
MSU students honored by chemistry department - Springfield News-Leader

AP Chemistry taught me to value the growth mindset – The JagWire

Although I didnt receive the grade I wanted, my experience with a challenging class was still beneficial

As I finish up the semester, I am letting out a huge sigh of relief. AP Chemistry, which has been the source of both excitement and stress for the past 9 months, is finally over. I can definitively say that it was the hardest class Ive ever taken, not necessarily because of the content, but because of the strain it put on me to learn faster, study harder and retain more than I have ever experienced in my high school career. Even though Im ending the semester on a lower score than I anticipated, Ive surprised myself by actually recognizing that Ive grown as a student since August. To me, this made the class worthwhile.

Arriving in AP Chem, I felt more than confident this was going to be my favorite class. I wanted my grades to be perfect so I could study chemistry in college and work in labs all day as a career. And that was a pretty attainable goal. I had breezed by in Pre-AP Chemistry, getting perfect scores on every single test, and the summer assignment didnt even force me to break a sweat. As the year went on, however, things just got more and more difficult. Like most AP classes, there is simply too much content to cover in such a short amount of time. I felt overwhelmed, and mostly scared, because there just seemed to be no other option than to take the grade I was given. No matter how many times I went to go see science teacher Mary Beth Mattingly, she couldnt make me understand chemistry.

Frankly, I still dont understand chemistry. I understand the various concepts, and the math, and how some things fit together, but I havent had the click yet. I havent had the big realization everyones been telling me about. Maybe its because I didnt study enough or I didnt watch enough Khan Academy videos, but mostly I think its because my own understanding just isnt there yet. And for a high school junior, thats OK. Im starting to view learning chemistry as a lifelong process instead of just a way to sign off on some arbitrary credit.

Just because I didnt receive outstanding chemistry grades this year in no way means I never will, and thats the idea that keeps me going. This idea that I can get better at it and improve upon myself is the true reward Ive gotten out of AP Chem. In high school theres this idea that learning a subject is done once you leave high school or college. Though some might be disappointed, thats just not true. Having a philosophy of improving yourself throughout life and at your own pace is called the growth mindset, and until this year, I had no experience with it.

Through taking AP Chem, Ive had some rough nights where Ive just cried at the kitchen counter because I couldnt remember all the intermolecular forces, but Ive also had the days in class where Im asking all the right questions. Ive had the labs with my friends where we mess up a titration so bad, we just have to laugh about it and start over. In the end, I may not have gotten an A, but AP Chem has still been my favorite class.

Read the original post:
AP Chemistry taught me to value the growth mindset - The JagWire

Texas Lutheran hosts chemistry fair – Seguin Gazette-Enterprise

A group of area students took a peek into the world of science Thursday night during Texas Lutheran Universitys CHAOS Chemistry Fair.

Amanda Galvan was among the area residents to visit the fair with their children.

My kids are both interested in science, and Im a student here at TLU, as well, she said. I felt like it was a good opportunity for them to actually do some small experiments and see the college students do experiments.

This was the third year the fair was held, with this years theme being Chemistry of the Earth.

This is our chemistry outreach night, where we have a lot of hands-on activities for students, TLU chemistry professor Alison Bray said. A lot of the experiments are based on different properties of the earth: the water thats on Earth, volcanoes, were doing some iron oxide rust experiments, a lot of things that are hands-on, and you can make snowflakes in the back.

The event is run by TLUs Pi Rho Chemistry Club and the volunteer staff was made up of TLU chemistry students.

Were an organization that does a lot of outreach at local schools and we do this once every year, club member and TLU student Lynsey Terrill said.

Children were able to make their own rust and use it to make artwork at the station she worked, Terrill said.

We use steel wool, salt and hydrogen peroxide and mix it up, she said. It oxidizes the steel wool and the iron in it to make rust. They go down to the filtering station and filter it with a coffee filter so just the rust is left on top. Then they come down here and make cave paintings using the rust they filtered out.

Additionally, the fair included chemiluminescence and a molting volcano made of thermite, TLU chemistry professor Mike Ruane said.

Were just doing outreach to the community, letting them know there is a university in town that does chemistry, he said. Were to get people to come here for college.

The fair also is a way for TLU to help get children interested in science, Bray said.

We think when kids interact with scientists, its a lot more exciting, she said. In school, they dont get to do a lot of these hands-on things, because they dont necessarily have the equipment or the training. Here we can let them do these things in a safe environment.

Ruane said the event is a way to get young students more acquainted to the nature of being a scientist.

Normally they think of scientists as these guys in a lab with a lab coat. They dont really get to see the fun thats in science, he said. So we try to bring the fun to the community and show them everything we can do.

Go here to read the rest:
Texas Lutheran hosts chemistry fair - Seguin Gazette-Enterprise

US Senate creates chemistry caucus – Chemistry World (subscription)

The US Senate has established a new chemistry caucus that will provide a bipartisan forum for senators to address topics related to chemistry, and to safeguard the countrys chemical industry. Major goals of the new forum include highlighting the importance of science in policymaking, promoting efforts to encourage chemical manufacturing and further developing the pipeline of new chemists in the US.

The House of Representatives launched its own chemistry caucus in September 2016, and its expansion to the Senate was made public on 28 March. Senator Chris Coons a chemistry major in college said the new caucus will enable the Senate to promote science in policymaking and encourage businesses to take the scientific advancements chemistry yields and bring them to the marketplace. Another leader of the chemistry caucus is Senator Steve Daines, who is the only chemical engineer in Congress.

Establishment of this bicameral caucus will serve as an important forum for pro-innovation, pro-chemistry lawmakers to advance the chemistry enterprise, said Thomas Connelly, the American Chemical Societys executive director and CEO. Never have policies and legislation focused on investments in research and development, job creation, economic growth, and US global competitiveness been more crucial to the success of the country.

Calvin Dooley, the American Chemistry Councils president and CEO, said these House and Senate caucuses have come at a very critical time or American chemical manufacturing. Reversing a long trend, our industry is experiencing historic growth here in the US that is having a very positive effect on domestic investment and adding jobs to our economy, he stated.

See the article here:
US Senate creates chemistry caucus - Chemistry World (subscription)

JACK PARKS: Basic chemistry on a conspiracy – The Albany Herald

Greetings, Jackolytes! Once again I must apologize for the long time between communications, but my time has been occupied with important research. I am writing to you today from a secret location and am transmitting it to the editors through an encrypted system because this information is potentially dangerous. But in the interest of the safety and well-being of every other person in this city, I must take the risk to myself and my family.

As I said, I have been doing some extensive research, specifically into local environmental concerns. I dont put much stock into conspiracy theories. But someone (who will remain nameless) alerted me to a potential threat and, since I trust this person, I felt it warranted some attention. I also have a passing knowledge of basic chemistry.

At least, I gained enough knowledge to pass Intro to Chemistry in high school. So I put what knowledge I retained to the test and did some digging. And I have discovered one whopper of a secret: Our water system has been contaminated with extremely high concentrations of a chemical known as hydric acid chemical name: dihydrogen-monoxide.

I know I use humor a lot, but I am not kidding about this. Information about dihydrogen-monoxide is freely available from legitimate scientific sources, and I encourage you to educate yourself. The dangers of this chemical are innumerable, but I will list several for you here so you can begin to get an idea of what were dealing with.

Dihydrogen-monoxide has a pH level of 7, more than three times higher than hydrochloric acid.

Dihydrogen-monoxide is one of the main contributors to acid rain and the greenhouse effect.

Dihydrogen-monoxide is used in car batteries.

Dihydrogen-monoxide can be especially dangerous during space travel, so all astronaut food goes through special processing to remove it.

Dihydrogen-monoxide is composed of two elements that are highly unstable and prone to explosive combustion.

Dihydrogen-monoxide is released into the atmosphere by airplanes in visible lines known as contrails.

Dihydrogen-monoxide can cause severe burns when vaporized.

Dihydrogen-monoxide is deadly when inhaled even in very small amounts.

Dihydrogen-monoxide is added to vaccines.

Dihydrogen-monoxide was the most abundant chemical found after the BP oil spill.

Dihydrogen-monoxide passes through even the highest quality filters.

Dihydrogen-monoxide cannot be washed off.

Dihydrogen-monoxide is so corrosive, it eats through iron, steel and stone.

Dihydrogen-monoxide is a waste product from nuclear power plants.

Dihydrogen-monoxide causes electrical failures and decreases the effectiveness of automobile brakes.

Dihydrogen-monoxide is used as both an industrial solvent and coolant.

And it is in our water.

Actually, it is our water. The chemical formula for di(2)hydrogen-mon(1)oxide is H2O. April Fools!

By the way, every item listed above is 100 percent true. Go back and read it again, but substitute water in place of dihydrogen-monoxide. Doesnt seem so scary now, does it? More just a list of interesting facts about water.

So many things these days are misunderstood just because they have names that are hard to pronounce. But just because something is referred to by its chemical name doesnt mean its any worse for you.

The truth is, everything is made up of chemicals. Chemicals are just molecules, and molecules are made up of different elements. And molecules can have very different properties than their base elements.

For instance, sodium is a metal that explodes in water. Chlorine is a poisonous gas. But the molecule sodium chloride is salt, which plays an essential part in keeping your body hydrated, as well as making food taste good. Like ketchup.

Seriously. Have you ever had salt-free ketchup? If not, you dont need to find out what youre missing. I tried it once. Suffice it to say that was one hot dog I ate plain. The point Im trying to make is that I can recommend avoiding salt-free ketchup because I have experience with it.

Its ironic that one of the biggest threats to the so-called Information Age is actually misinformation. People with no degree or experience are often treated as experts simply because they write well and have a unique style, lots of followers, or just because what they say challenges the mainstream.

Theres nothing wrong with questioning the mainstream. But if youre going to hold actual experts with years or decades of training and experience under a microscope, you should also do the same with those encouraging you to do so. The person encouraging you to question authority should be able to stand up to the same level of questioning.

Too often these people dont allow questions though. They either laugh them away, delete comments or even block people who challenge their words. Does that sound like someone who is honest? Someone who is dedicated to the truth? What reason do you have to trust these self-styled gurus any more than the ones they oppose?

You shouldnt be afraid of something youve never heard of before just because someone tells you that you should be. If you see something mentioned in an article or on a social network and you dont know what it is, take a few minutes to read about it from a neutral source. Educate yourself on it. Worst-case scenario, you have an interesting bit of trivia for the water cooler.

On the other hand, you just might learn how to think for yourself. Even more importantly, youll be able to show others how to think for themselves. So kick back, relax and enjoy an ice cold glass of dihydrogen-monoxide.

Its not like itll kill you.

Jack Parks writes Talk Nerdy to Me, an occasional column on nerd culture. Follow him on Twitter @tn2me.

Success! An email has been sent with a link to confirm list signup.

Error! There was an error processing your request.

Get Breaking News alerts from the Albany Herald delivered to your email.

Get the Local News headlines from the Albany Herald delivered daily to your email.

Get the Sports headlines from the Albany Herald delivered daily to your email.

Read more:
JACK PARKS: Basic chemistry on a conspiracy - The Albany Herald

Science teachers, alumnae reflect on UMSL’s first female chemistry professor, who inspired their careers – UMSL Daily (blog)

Professor Emerita of Chemistry Jane Miller (center) stands with former students and UMSL alumnae (from left) Jeanette Hencken, Liz Petersen, Sandra Mueller and Joan Twillman. The women credit Miller with inspiring them to pursue careers in science education and instilling their passion for science and womens empowerment in generations of St. Louis youth. (Photo by August Jennewein)

Four University of MissouriSt. Louis alumnae struggle to find adequate words to sum up Jane Miller.

The professor emerita of chemistry has meant so much to Jeanette Hencken, Sandra Mueller, Liz Petersen and Joan Twillman. Its impossible to touch on all the ways she has fueled their teaching careers, love of science and empowerment of women in the field and beyond.

Anybody that she comes in contact with, its almost like she has this fairy dust she sprinkles over them, Petersen said. Shes just so inspirational.

After having Miller as a professor, the four women went on to become some of the St. Louis regions most outstanding and accomplished science teachers.

Hencken, BA chemistry 1985, has taught chemistry and forensics science at Webster Groves High School since 1993. Besides earning a 2012 Peabody Leaders in Education Award, Hencken has been a leading expert in establishing forensics science curricula and workshops for high school teachers across the nation. She and her students also gather and document Payless and Walmart shoe data to send to the Federal Bureau of Investigation and maintain a website for law enforcement and forensic footwear examiners to reference for crime scene investigations. They are the only resource for this information on shoes from Payless and Walmart because no other agency or person has been allowed to photograph and document within those stores. This entire projectI never dreamt it would be like this, said Hencken, who still teaches and coordinates the effort.

Mueller, BA chemistry 1976, taught science for 37 years, most of those as a chemistry teacher at John Burroughs School. She would arrive at school every day at five in the morning and stay late. A shining moment in her career came in 2015 when one of her students received the Presidential Scholar Award for Missouri and named her as his most influential teacher. She got to go to Washington D.C. and be recognized for her inspiring teaching. Mueller was also named the St. Louis-area Chemistry Teacher of the Year and chaired the American Chemical Society-Topical Group for six years. That was a big thing I tried to do, she said, to get the teachers the resources available to them. Shes since retired.

Petersen, BA biology 1979, was a teacher at Ladue Middle School for 18 years, where she taught sixth-grade Earth science and seventh-grade life science. Her colleagues credit her with turning around Science Teachers of Missouri, a resource organization for science educators in the state. Petersen was the president of STOM in 2005 and served in an active leadership capacity for 10 years. She was also the Humane Society Teacher of the Year in 2003 and named Outstanding Teacher of the Year by the St Louis Academy of Science. For me its really about touching kids lives, Petersen said. Theres a part of you that goes with every single kid. She now does professional development for teachers as a facilitator and instructor of STEM TQ (Teacher Quality) at Washington University in St. Louis.

Twillman, BA chemistry 1981, taught chemistry at St. Charles West High School for 24 years. She organized the Science Research Kids class there and had students go to the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, where they were recognized for their excellence. Twillman had to guide each student through a research project. If they didnt know more than I did about their subject, they didnt know enough, Twillman said. She was named Outstanding Teacher of the Year by the St Louis Academy of Science. Twillman can also boast having a former student hired to the Central Intelligence Agency during his first year as an engineering undergraduate at Missouri S&T in Rolla. The offer came after the recruiters learned of his impressive gadget-building experience in the science club Twillman helped establish at St. Charles West. Twillman is retired now.

Ask any one of them, and theyll trace their passion for science back to Miller, who they, in part, credit for their career successes.

Miller graduated from the all-womens Agnes Scott College in Decatur, Georgia, where she earned her bachelors degree in chemistry. She went on to receive both her masters and doctoral degrees in chemistry from Tulane University in New Orleans.

After marrying a St. Louisan, Miller relocated to the Gateway City. She came to UMSL as the first female hire in the Department of Chemistry in 1965, only two years after the official opening of the university. She later became the first woman to receive tenure in the department as well.

It was not an easy ride, Miller said.

Womens roles in higher education, and especially the sciences, were often questioned and undervalued something she later challenged and helped change at the university.

Due to a limited budget and social stigmas of the time, Miller didnt have a laboratory.As a professor, she was required to do research, so she took up researching the history of science, particularly the history of chemistry and women in the field. She also became one of the go-to methods teaching supervisors for students who had majored in chemistry with the intent to teach and earn their certification from UMSL. Miller would advise and observe their student teaching.

When shed observe the sessions and then afterwardsyou just sat there and talked and talked, Mueller said.

She always wanted to know what we were doing, Hencken said. It was all sharing ideas what you knew and what she could share.

I never had an education course, Miller said. So I did work very hard to get into science education so that I could do a good job with them. And it was a great situation. Not only because you can make sure that your students know the material theyre teaching, but also teach them how to be a good teacher. Schools just begged for our student teachers. They never had a problem getting a job.

Besides her outstanding support, the four women also remember some key traits Miller taught them.

Independence, Petersen said. And to stand up for yourself. Its OK to challenge authority. In fact, please do so.

And while Miller challenged her students, they also felt nothing but support from her.

She had total confidence in you, Twillman added. And she knows everything. She can give you information and make you know that you asked for it, or maybe you didnt, but you wanted to hear it when she told it to you.

Im so proud of all my students because they have done really wonderful things, Miller said.

When asked about her pioneer approach to teaching as a woman in the sciences, Miller had no doubt about where she learned her fierceness.

I think a lot of it had to do with going to a womens high school and a womens college, Miller said. When I graduated from Agnes Scott, I thought I could do anything. I had had mentors who were excellent women. Most of the faculty at both schools were women. And just, I loved learning, and I loved research. Thats what did it.

Miller taught at UMSL until 1992, when she retired. She is 89 this year, and her four former students are already planning her birthday celebration.

In fact, birthdays are a tradition with this group. They meet five times a year to celebrate each others big day.

When you get home from the dinner, you just feel so good for so longso energized and ready to tackle the next big thing, Mueller said.

We all love Jane, Petersen added. And we love each other and support each other. Were just really lucky to know her and grow with her.

Short URL: http://blogs.umsl.edu/news/?p=67444

Continue reading here:
Science teachers, alumnae reflect on UMSL's first female chemistry professor, who inspired their careers - UMSL Daily (blog)

The Chemistry of Change – The Times

Dr. James Perkins shared his inspirational story during his keynote address, The Chemistry of Change, during Mondays Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day Celebration at Lincoln Park Performing Arts Center in Midland. An esteemed educator and chemist, Perkins, a Midland native, spoke to a packed audience Monday about growing up in a steel town, the pitfalls of segregation and the importance of role models.

MIDLAND Esteemed educator and chemist James Perkins spoke to a packed audience Monday about growing up in a steel town, the pitfalls of segregation and the importance of role models.

Perkins addressed this chemistry of change through the work of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who believed in peace and diversity, during a special program in honor of the late civil rights leader.

Its like Dr. King was attempting to change the salinity of the Atlantic Ocean with an eye dropper full of fresh water, but little did we know that that eye dropper represented by his person and a small team of leaders was not an eye dropper of fresh water, Perkins said. Instead it was an iceberg the size of Greenland represented by the civil rights movement that would indeed change the salinity of the vast ocean representing our nation. The inertia of what he created is still changing every aspect of our society. The test of real change is whether or not it can be sustained.

Perkins, born and raised in Midland, said neither of his parents completed high school and had placed a premium on their childrens education. The family of eight was just one of a couple black families living in Midland Heights, where Perkins said his father created a garden in an empty lot to provide food for the family and raise additional money for other needs.

Growing up, we were materially very poor, however the wealth of our values, the values they instilled in us, was without bounds. The deep faith that I developed while attending Mt. Olive Baptist Church, and my home environment established by my mom and dad, prepared me for the substantial challenges that followed.

Perkins recalled being the lone child turned away from a public swimming pool during a scouting trip while the rest of the children, all white, were permitted to swim. He recalled being the first black varsity basketball player at Slippery Rock University, where he majored in chemistry in the 1960s, with his brother being only the second. Despite those experiences, Perkins had teachers and coaches in Midland and throughout college who looked out for him and pushed him to the limit. Having a positive educational experience early on, particularly in chemistry and physics, instilled the concept of excellence that he carried with him throughout his academic years and beyond.

The garden that my father showed me how to prepare, plant seeds and grow a variety of fruits and vegetables, prepared me to plant the seeds necessary to produce hundreds of black engineers, MDs and Ph.Ds, who will in turn serve as role models for young children and their parents, Perkins said.

Hosted by the Midland Womens Civic Club, Perkins presentation was the culmination of The Chemistry of Change, Beaver Countys official Dr. Martin Luther King Day Celebration on Monday at Lincoln Park Performing Arts Center in Midland.

"Itsa great day when surrounding communities come together in unity to learn and fulfill the true meaningof life as we celebrated a great man of spiritual and moral values, said Stephanie Pennington, chairwoman of the King celebration. Dr. Perkins grew up in the Midland community during the civil rights movement and today it was inspirational to hear how Dr. King's legacy successfully impacted his life by serving young people and many institutions within our nation and beyond.

The annual day of fellowship and enlightenment benefits local hometown college-bound students through the Greater Midland Scholarship Foundation.

Perkins keynote speech wrapped up a full day, which began with a professional development session for educators earning Act 48 credits. Attendees viewed the film Hidden Figures, a biographical drama about Katherine Johnson and the female African-American mathematicians working at NASA during the space race in the 1960s.

Following a catered luncheon, inspirational music and dance performances and multi-media presentations were showcased under the direction of Lincoln Parks Resident Artists and school and community groups from across the region.

Perkins, president of Translational Technologies LLC., has a doctorate in chemistry from the University of Pittsburgh, and has served academic institutions internationally as a professor, academic administrator and consultant. An entrepreneur, his research and publications have been instrumental to organizations in the development of science, engineering and technological programs throughout the United States and Africa.

While much has been done, the road is still hard and there are many challenges because of race or gender, but do not let that stop you, he said. Remember what has been done to make your path better, and the responsibility to make the path even better for those that will follow you.

Go here to read the rest:
The Chemistry of Change - The Times

UPDATE: KCFD recommends evacuations for people within six miles of chemical spill – WWLP.com

UPDATE: The department is advising evacuations for people who live or work within six miles of the spill site.

If you live or work beyond six and up to nine miles of this location, it is recommend that you shelter in place, the Kern County Sheriffs Office said. The department recommends that residents close all their doors and windows, shut off their central air systems and close fireplace vents.

An evacuation center has been set up by the American Red Cross at First Baptist Church, located at 220 N. First St.

TAFT, Calif. (KGET) The Kern County Fire Department is responding to a chemical spill near Taft.

The department said the hazardous materials spill occurred at Taft Manufacturing Co., located at 19705 S. Lake Road. Employees have been evacuated from the plant.

According to Taft Mayor Dave Noerr, the chemical acrolein was accidentally released at the plant. The chemical is used as an intermediate in the synthesis of acrylic acid and as a biocide.

Acrolien vapor may cause eye, nasal and respiratory tract irritations.

Taft College has ordered students to go home due to the spill, the college confirmed.

Taft Union High School and all schools in the Taft City School District said they are in shelter in place for student and staff safety. Shelter in place means they have found a safe location indoors and are staying there until they are given an all-clear or ordered to evacuate.

The road was closed at the intersection around 10 a.m. and motorists are encouraged to use an alternate route, according to the county.

Read the original:
UPDATE: KCFD recommends evacuations for people within six miles of chemical spill - WWLP.com

Jon Cooper: No chemistry concerns when Lightning’s hurt players ready to return – Tampabay.com

TAMPA Coach Jon Cooper began his post-morning-skate news conference Saturday by going through the list of Lightning players not available for that night's game against the visiting Canadiens.

C Steven Stamkos? C Tyler Johnson?

"No. No," Cooper said. "Keeping going. (C Cedric) Paquette? No. (D Jason) Garrison? No."

Later in the session, Cooper was asked whether that given the play of the young players who have stepped in from AHL Syracuse to help fuel the Lightning's late-season playoff push, is it possible that the return of Stamkos, who hasn't played since Nov. 15 because of knee surgery, or Johnson, who has missed 11 games with a lower-body injury, could upset the current chemistry in the dressing room?

"For me, in the end, I want the best players in, and when those guys are healthy and ready to go, they're going back in," Cooper said. "I do see your point of don't rock the boat when things are going well, but we lost three games in a row right before (the four-game winning streak leading into Saturday's game.)"

Cooper said he liked the way D Jake Dotchin, C Gabriel Dumont, C Yanni Gourde and company have played during the winning streak but given a choice, he wants his best players on the ice.

"In the end, wouldn't it be great to have Stamkos back? Yes. Johnson? Yes. Paquette? You just go down the list," Cooper said. "But you got to tip your cap to the players who've come up. They've been game-changers for us."

How much of a game-changer?

"These guys that have come up have really been the straw that stirred our drink," he said.

Hedman of the class

D Victor Hedman set the Lightning season record for points by a defenseman Thursday against the Red Wings when he picked up his 51st assist of the season. Hedman entered Saturday with 66 points (15 goals) to break Roman Hamrlik's mark of 65 (16-49) set in 1995-96. Dan Boyle (20-43) had 63 in 2005-06.

Doing what he can

To say coach Jon Cooper is impressed with C Gabriel Dumont is an understatement. That he was a fifth-round draft pick in 2009 might be the key to his success, Cooper said. Instead of wondering when he would reach the NHL, like some first- and second-rounders think, Dumont, 26, just worked on improving his game.

Now Dumont is taking faceoffs in the defensive zone and blocking shots.

"There's no pressure on (lower-round picks), and they just work, work, work," Cooper said. "They have to get past the hurdle of not being a high draft pick, but once they get past that, everything is infectious with the way they play. It's on (Dumont) how long this is going to last, but he continues to give me reasons to put him on the ice. Then you couple that with he's a phenomenal kid. He still just wants to learn and get better. Guys like him is a good reason why we're still hanging around (the playoff picture)."

Injury updates

C Steven Stamkos (knee), C Tyler Johnson (lower body), C Cedric Paquette (lower body) and D Jason Garrison (lower body) did not play Saturday. Cooper said Stamkos and Johnson could return on the road trip that begins Tuesday in Boston.

Jon Cooper: No chemistry concerns when Lightning's hurt players ready to return 04/01/17 [Last modified: Saturday, April 1, 2017 9:54pm] Photo reprints | Article reprints

Here is the original post:
Jon Cooper: No chemistry concerns when Lightning's hurt players ready to return - Tampabay.com

Chemists recognised in 2020 New Year’s Honours list | News – Chemistry World

A number of chemists are among those who have been recognised in the 2020 New Years Honours list. Among those honoured are innovators in materials science, pharma and analytical chemistry.

The University of Cambridges Anthony Cheetham received a knighthood for services to materials chemistry, UK science and global outreach. Cheethams research focuses on inorganic materials including metalorganic frameworks and hybrid perovskites, which have potential applications in nuclear energy and photovoltaics.

The UKs special envoy on antimicrobial resistance, Sally Davies, was made Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath for her services to public health and research. Davies, who had previously been made a Dame in 2009, was the chief medical officer for England between 2010 and 2019 and has also served as the UK governments chief scientific adviser.

Lynn Gladden, also at Cambridge, was made a Dame for services to academic and industrial research in chemical engineering. Gladdens research focuses on magnetic resonance techniques for studying chemical engineering challenges, including in catalysis, drug delivery and oil recovery and she has been executive chair of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council since 2018.

Menelas Pangalos, AstraZenecas executive vice-president for biopharmaceuticals research, received a knighthood for services to UK science.

Of the 1097 people named on the list, 14.6% received honours for work in science, technology and health sectors. A full list of chemists recognised in this years honours can be found on the Royal Society of Chemistrys website.

The rest is here:
Chemists recognised in 2020 New Year's Honours list | News - Chemistry World

Former chemistry chair to retire after 50 years in academia – GW Hatchet

Michael King always found joy in teaching others about math and science from a young age.

He has tutored many of his fellow students since elementary school and knew his future belonged with the study of chemistry and in pedagogy when he headed to college at the Illinois Institute of Technology. After receiving his doctorate from Harvard University, he started as an associate professor in the discipline at New York University in 1970 before he began at GW in 1973 2020 marks his 50th and final year of working in academia.

I knew at a very early age that teaching was something that was natural and comfortable for me, and I knew I wanted to pursue it, King said.

After serving as the chair of the chemistry department for more than 20 years, from 1996 to 2019, King will retire from teaching at the end of this academic year to focus on his own research. After retirement, King plans to travel with his wife, conduct more of his own research on organic chemistry in GWs laboratories and work on behalf of the department to recruit graduate students.

It was just an amazing experience, and I am really humbled to have been able to represent this department in a period of substantial growth, King said. For over the years, I have had amazing colleagues and I am so proud to be able to represent them in the forms of the University.

King said he has been heavily involved with the organic chemistry program at the University throughout his career, teaching General Chemistry I and II and managing laboratory operations for the program.

Chemistry was an area of science that came naturally to me from high school to now, King said. I always enjoyed it I liked the manipulations, I enjoyed watching the chemistry unfold in the laboratory so all of that sort of played out from my bachelors degree to my doctorate.

He said he enjoyed the size of GWs student body during the first couple decades of his career smaller than the student body in recent years because the smaller class sizes allowed him to get to know his students and talk with them on a little bit more on a personal level.

King said he felt his previous experiences in academia made him qualified to serve as chair of the department after his predecessor David Ramaker resigned. He said he put his name up for consideration to serve in the position, and his colleagues elected him to serve as the departments leader.

I was fortunate for my colleagues to have the confidence to select me to do that, King said. So one of the things I was particularly interested in doing was to improve the communication and collaboration of the department that would be of value to my colleagues.

While serving as chair, he worked to increase opportunities for faculty in the department to work together and confer on projects, King said.

Kings colleagues said he consistently sought to provide support to students, faculty and the University throughout his tenure.

Former Provost Forrest Maltzman said he worked with King on several different initiatives and projects, including the design process for the Science and Engineering Hall and the creation of the Columbian College of Arts and Sciences Deans Council.

He said King played a leading role working with the provosts office and the Department of Operations to develop SEHs design, adding that King deserves a large portion of the credit for the buildings completion, which Maltzman characterized as inevitably the most complex building in the University.

Maltzman said King has served as a mentor to academic leaders across the University and has demonstrated the value of collaboration and collegiality.

While building a very successful and research-oriented chemistry department is an important contribution that Michael made, his impact is much broader and his legacy will be felt for a very long time across the University because of the lessons he informally taught his colleagues about being an academic leader and the example he set, Maltzman said in an email.

Christopher Cahill, the current chair of the chemistry department, said King played an integral role in growing the department to its fullest potential by doubling the number of faculty in the department.

He has been tirelessly flying the chemistry flag the entire time he has been here and, as a consequence, we have been able to grow and have our aspirations for research and education evolve accordingly, Cahill said.

Cahill said one of his fondest memories of King was watching him hold office hours in a hallway in SEH using the buildings whiteboard walls. He said a crowd always showed up to talk to King, even on a Friday afternoon.

He was sort of beloved because he has taught organic chemistry this whole time and organic chemistry has, in many respects, an undeserved reputation of being an incredibly difficult and sometimes weed-out course, Cahill said. But Michael King has never taught this as a weed-out course and has always been committed to his students success.

LaKeisha McClary, an assistant professor of chemistry, said she has seen King work tirelessly to support faculty members individual growth as well as the departments collective growth throughout her seven years working with him.

I appreciate a lot about Dr. King, but perhaps what resonates most with me is that he always considered different perspectives within the department and sought to do what was best for us our graduate students and chemistry majors and minors, our staff and our faculty, she said in an email.

This article appeared in the January 13, 2020 issue of the Hatchet.

Here is the original post:
Former chemistry chair to retire after 50 years in academia - GW Hatchet

Chargers optimistic budding chemistry will lead to more wins in L.A. … – ESPN (blog)

SAN DIEGO -- One of the goals for any new coach is to create a winning culture that unites players under one accord.

Los Angeles Chargers head coach Anthony Lynn believes hes accomplishing that task during offseason work at Chargers Park.

Under first-year strength coach John Lott, players were put through an arduous new conditioning program that focused on long-distance running, with the hope that the endurance training would lead to less injuries and better stamina at the end of games.

It was huge, Lynn said. If youre going to finish games in the fourth quarter, you have to be in shape. You and I both know it. It doesnt take talent to be in great shape. That can be a competitive advantage for us.

In addition, assistant coaches like defensive coordinator Gus Bradley and special-teams coordinator George Stewart have brought a new intensity and energy to the players they coach.

You can tell they really like one another, Lynn said. Its a competition, but you have veteran guys and the young guys. The young guys are standing out, working hard with veteran guys.

I like what were seeing from the team, chemistry-wise. I think thats why its so important were all here in the offseason and doing this together. Because when the season starts, you dont have time to build chemistry.

Unlike the other 31 NFL teams, the Chargers will be in the midst of relocating to Los Angeles once training camp starts at the end of July. After the teams mandatory minicamp from June 13-15 concludes, employees will pack up Chargers Park and begin the 100-mile move to Costa Mesa in Orange County.

The Chargers will hold training camp at Jack Hammett Sports Complex near Costa Mesa High School. Once training camp finishes at the end of August, the team plans to move into its new headquarters nearby.

The Chargers are also slated to play in the intimate 30,000-seat StubHub Center in Carson, California, for the next three seasons.

The transition to a new city could be a distraction for players. The Chargers only have to look at what happened last season to the Los Angeles Rams, who finished 4-12 and fired head coach Jeff Fisher near the end of the season.

Chargers players, however, believe the move a few hours north will not be an excuse for what happens on the field in 2017.

Im still a Charger, said cornerback Casey Hayward, who signed with the team as a free agent last offseason after spending his first four years in the NFL with the Green Bay Packers. Were still going to be in California, and in a great city in L.A. in the Orange County area, so you cant beat that. Were still going to be in sunny California, so I like it.

Lynn said the focus during minicamp next week will be fine-tuning what players have learned during offseason work.

We will continue our install, Lynn said. Well go back through it for the third time. Guys should own it, to be honest with you, next week. And they should play a little faster, a little more confident, but I still expect the same spirit, the same competition that you saw today.

Read more:
Chargers optimistic budding chemistry will lead to more wins in L.A. ... - ESPN (blog)

Team gathers unprecedented data on atmosphere’s organic chemistry – MIT News

For a few weeks over the summer in 2011, teams of scientists from around the world converged on a small patch of ponderosa pine forest in Colorado to carry out one of the most detailed, extended survey of atmospheric chemistry ever attempted in one place, in many cases using new measurement devices created especially for this project. Now, after years of analysis, their comprehensive synthesis of the findings have been released this week.

The teams, which included a group from MIT using a newly-developed device to identify and quantify compounds of carbon, reported their combined results in a paper in the journal Nature Geoscience. Jesse Kroll, MIT associate professor of civil and environmental engineering and of chemical engineering, and James Hunter, an MIT technical instructor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering who was a doctoral student in Krolls group at the time of the research, were senior author and lead author, respectively, of the 24 contributors to the report. Associate Professor Colette Heald of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences was also a co-author.

The organic (carbon-containing) compounds they studied in that patch of Colorado forest play a key role in atmospheric chemical processes that can affect air quality, the health of the ecosystem, and the climate itself. Yet many of these processes remain poorly understood in their real-world complexity, and they had never been so rigorously sampled, studied, and quantified in one place before.

The goal was trying to understand the chemistry associated with organic particulate matter in a forested environment, Kroll explains. The various groups took a lot of different measurements using state-of-the-art instruments we each had developed. In doing so, they were able to fill in significant gaps in the inventory of organic compounds in the atmosphere, finding that about a third of them were in the form of previously unmeasured semi-volatile and intermediate-volatility organic compounds (SVOCs and IVOCs).

Weve long suspected there were gaps in our measurements of carbon in the atmosphere, Kroll says. There seemed to be more aerosols than we can explain by measuring their precursors.

The MIT team, as well as some of the other research groups, developed instruments that specifically targeted these hard-to-measure compounds, which Kroll describes as still in the gas phase, but sticky. Their stickiness makes it hard to get them through an inlet into a measuring device, but these compounds may play a significant role in the formation and alteration of aerosols, tiny airborne particles that can contribute to smog or to the nucleation of raindrops or ice crystals, affecting the Earths climate.

Some of these instruments were used for the first time in this campaign, Kroll says. When analyzing the results, which provided unprecedented measurements of the SVOCs and IVOCs, we realized we had this data set that provided much more information on organic compounds than we ever had before. By bringing the data from all these instruments together into one combined dataset, we were able to describe the organic compounds in the atmosphere in a more comprehensive way than had ever been possible, to figure out whats really going on.

Its a more complicated challenge than it might seem, the researchers point out. A very large number of different organic compounds are constantly being emitted by trees and other vegetation, which vary in their chemical composition, their physical properties, and their ability to react chemically with other compounds. As soon as they enter the air many of the compounds begin to oxidize, which exponentially increases their number and diversity.

The collaborative campaign to characterize the quantities and reactions of these different compounds took place in a section of the Manitou Experimental Forest Observatory in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado. Five different instruments were used to collect the data on organic compounds, and three of those had never been used before.

Despite the progress, much remains to be done, the researchers say. While the field measurements provided a detailed profile of the amounts of different compounds over time, it could not identify the specific reactions and pathways that were transforming one set of compounds to another. That kind of analysis requires the direct study of the reactions in a controlled laboratory setting, and that kind of work is ongoing, in Krolls MIT lab and elsewhere.

Filling in all these details will make it possible to refine the accuracy of atmospheric models and help to assess such things as strategies to mitigate specific air pollution issues, from ozone to particulate matter, or to assess the sources and removal mechanisms of atmospheric components that affect Earths climate.

The measurement team included researchers from the University of Colorado, the California Air Resources Board, the University of California at Berkeley, the University of Toronto, the University of Innsbruck in Austria, the National Center for Atmospheric Research, the Edmund Mach Foundation in Italy, Harvard University, the University of Montreal, Aerodyne Research, Carnegie-Mellon University, the University of California at Irvine, and the University of Washington. The work was funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Read the original:
Team gathers unprecedented data on atmosphere's organic chemistry - MIT News

Will Pro Sports Teams Ever Figure Out How to Quantify How Well Teammates Get Along? – Slate Magazine

David Ross, right, congratulates Jon Lester for pitching a complete game for the win against the Los Angeles Dodgers on June 1 in Chicago.

Jon Durr/Getty Images

What makes a group of athletes greater than the sum of its parts? Is it the knowing glance that New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady exchanges with Rob Gronkowski when he looks down the line of scrimmage? Is it the fire that the Chicago Cubs Jon Lester mustered after his personal catcher David Ross trotted out to the mound to dispense some wisdom in a tense sixth inning?

Team chemistry is the most elusive factor in sportsthe holy grail of performance analytics, according to Harvard Business Review. Its only logical that certain teams get along better than others, but how important are these relationships, and can teams optimize them?

The fact that the sports worlds intangibles seem, by definition, immeasurable make them an irresistible challenge for researchers whove figured out how to quantify so much of what happens on the field of play. Neuroscientists have claimed to measure chemistry through the synchronized heartbeats of teammates. Other researchers have examined the correlation of high fives and wins.

The rewards for solving the chemistry riddle are high, in part because maximizing chemistry would come at almost zero cost. If a team could determine that a player would contribute more of a winning attitude than another guy with a similar statistical output, theyd get that chemistry boost for freeat least until other teams figured out how to quantify that extra boon to team spirit.

Professional sports franchises are still a long way away from figuring out how to maximize their players ability to work together. Sam Miller, who wrote a feature on team chemistry for ESPN the Magazine in 2013, told me that its not like you have 25 guys, therefore you have 25 relationships. You have 25 guys, therefore you have probably billions of relationships. And Russell Carleton, who has written about the quantification of chemistry for Baseball Prospectus, says major-league clubs havent yet come close to understanding a baseball team as its own little culture. The economics of baseball ensure that in-house analytics gurus focus more on a players hard statistics than something as squirrelly as clubhouse presence. At least for now, every team would be advised to build its roster based on wins above replacement rather than, say, the alleged 10 wins worth of value that pitcher Brandon McCarthy claimed his teammate Brandon Inge contributed off the field.

In reality, were not even particularly close to developing a consensus understanding of what the term chemistry means. Analysts and academics have mountains of player performance data, but these on-field metrics can only carry their research so far. Baseball players spend more time in the relative privacy of locker rooms, dugouts, bullpens, airplanes, and hotel rooms than they do on the field. The limited access researchers have to these spaces means theyre lacking a vital source of quantifiable data. With limited inputs to calculate chemistry, statisticians have to get creative to find something measureable. But what they end up measuring might not actually be chemistry.

Take the work of Katerina Bezrukova, a professor at the University at Buffalo School of Management who has worked with Major League Baseball and the National Basketball Association to shed light on chemistrys role in team performance.* Her research focuses on the demographic fault lines in sports, intrateam divisions that develop from differences in teammates racial, ethnic, and economic backgrounds. She claims that teams must strike an optimal balance between diversity and homogeneity and that teams that fall too far on either side of the golden mean win fewer games. In an MLB season, she finds, chemistry is worth about three wins.

Although demographic factors may have some say in how a team gets along, Bezrukovas research pays little mind to players individual personalities. Thats a far more difficult element to harness, but without it you end up with a circuitous definition of chemistry. Bezrukova has found something to measure. Its just unclear what that something is.

A paper presented at this years MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference leans on a similar crutch. In Search of David Ross, named for the backup catcher and spiritual leader of the 2016 World Series champion Cubs, takes a stab at quantifying the indirect impact that an individual player can have on team wins through making their teammates better. The authors do some messy math to get there, employing a regression model on FanGraphs wins above replacement statistic. There is on average a 20 percent variance, they report, between a teams actual win total and the cumulative WAR of all the players on that team. They attribute half of that 20 percent gap to what they call chemistry.

If we wanted to measure chemistry for real, pro baseball would need to function as a laboratory first and a competitive arena second.

There are plenty of problems with this approach. Carleton and Miller both say such a model, which points to a negative space in the calculation of team performance and works backward to fill it in, risks sweeping a lot of unrelated stuff into the chemistry bucket. Miller points out that analysts have traditionally attributed discrepancies between team wins and cumulative WAR to a teams relative clutchnessthat is, random (well, probably random) fluctuations in how similarly skilled players perform in crucial moments throughout the season. Carleton says his concern is that the paper bundles on-field interaction effects into chemistry. His example: If shortstop A plays for a team whose pitching staff produces a lot of ground balls, he may have an inflated WAR compared with shortstop B, whose pitching staff generates a lot of fly balls. Shortstop B produces less value for his team because hes spending a lot of time twiddling his thumbs, but that doesnt necessarily mean he has bad relationships with his teammates or even that he is worse at baseball.

When I brought this up with the authors of the David Ross paper, they said their methods accommodate exactly this sort of scenario. That shortstop who is fielding a lot of infield ground balls? They argue he has good chemistry with his pitchers.

The issue here, then, isnt that the authors are bad at math. Its that their version of chemistryessentially, anything that makes teams better than the players individual characteristics might suggestis not what most of us would call chemistry.

The authors of the papera pair of economists at the Chicago Federal Reserve and a professor at the Indiana University Kelley School of Businessfound a creative workaround given their lack of access to baseball clubhouses, using publicly available player performance data to take aim at an abstract target. If we wanted to measure chemistry for real, pro baseball would need to function as a laboratory first and a competitive arena second. In this fantasyland, statisticians would have unrestricted access to clubhouse social scenes. They could track what players talked about behind closed doors and how long those conversations lasted. They could also randomize trades, testing out different players in different circumstances. Carleton argues that measuring chemistry wouldnt even be that hard in a world like this one. But sadly for researchers (and happily for players), that level of omniscience and omnipotence isnt in the offing, at least in this century.

In the present day, MLB teams use personality exams that that have little more validity than a Myers-Briggs test. But more advanced analytics may find their way into front offices soon. Bezrukova has presented her research to general managers, and Carleton also confirmed to me that in-house analysts from various teams are working on measuring chemistry. But even small breakthroughs will be hard to come by when no one knows what to look for. Until we reach a consensus view of
what chemistry means, well all just be guessing whether David Ross paternal drawl instilled just a touch more confidence in Jon Lester, and how much it matters if it did.

Correction, May 2, 2017: This piece originally misstated that Katerina Bezrukova is a psychology professor at the University of Buffalo. She is a professorat the University at Buffalo School of Management. (Return.)

See more here:
Will Pro Sports Teams Ever Figure Out How to Quantify How Well Teammates Get Along? - Slate Magazine

How Kevin Durant and Steph Curry learned to share the limelight – The Mercury News

SALT LAKE CITY Stephen Curry took a quick deep breath. He was about to yell back at Kevin Durant, but he caught himself.

Durant took out his mouthpiece and screamed at Curry.

STEPH! Durant yelled, then paused with a death stare, waiting for Curry to turn around. GET OUT!

Curry swallowed his next words, turned away from Durant and walked toward the bench shaking his head. Curry kicked a chair when he got to the bench, causing the seat cushion to fly.

It might have looked like trouble in paradise. Really, it was a sign of progress, an illustration of how their relationship has grown.

Ten months since Durant made his choice to leave Oklahoma City, he is already so ingratiated into the Warriors fold that hes freely, publicly yelling at the franchise cornerstone. The rapport is built between the two to the point where such heated exchanges dont stick.

Weve seen it with Durant and Draymond Green, the two players who hit it off faster than any. It took time for Curry and Durant to get here, to get past the niceties. But they both were able to get here because they both have sacrificed for this super team. They have skin in the game.

Durant said before joining the Warriors, he had to hear from Curry. He had to know Curry really wanted him in the core. He didnt want the truth to come out later.

Curry convinced Durant by showing up to the Hamptons to recruit him, and by poignant text messages about his willingness to share the kingdom he built for the sake of the kingdoms sustained dominance.

If the Warriors win the NBA title, the happy ending will have been earned. The relationship between the two MVPs has taken work. So much potential is there for resentment and enmity.

Want Warriors news in your inbox? Sign up for the free DubsDaily newsletter.

Nobody said sacrifice was easy. Perhaps these two MVPs are the only ones who could pull this off.

They have a great relationship, Warriors assistant coach Bruce Fraser said after leading a shooting drill with both of them on Currys favorite court in the Warriors practice facility. They are two guys who have seen a lot and dont care about all that other stuff. They just want to win.

Durant averaged a career-low 16.5 shots per game. It was the most efficient season of his career, but the green light he had always enjoyed was yellow pretty often.

For four months, he was called every synonym of soft as possible for leaving Oklahoma City and joining the team that beat the Thunder. Then when he could finally do something about it, he did. He averaged 27.1 points on 57 percent shooting the first month of the season.

His hot start was punctuated by 36 points and 15 rebounds at Cleveland on Christmas Day, redeeming his name in a showdown against LeBron James.

That hot start cost Curry. He got lost in the Durant Redemption campaign. Curry was on a redemption tour of his own. After a poor showing in the NBA Finals, he had something to prove. And his play the first two months of the season was validating the criticism about him.

It wasnt easy to hear it was Durants team now after all the work he had done to build it. Curry has an ego like all of them. But his sacrifice was in swallowing it, even as members of his own camp mumbled about how Curry was being slighted.

Then it was Durant with the poignant message to Curry. He told Curry to play his game. He promised Curry he would be fine bending his considerable talents around Currys style of play. The dialogue on how to make this work began.

And between their talks are lots and lots of laughs. At team gatherings, they are almost inseparable and riotous in their fun. Anyone who sees them together, especially with Green in the mix, can see why they work because they both value the camaraderie and brotherhood. They love the fun times behind the scenes even more than the glory in front of the cameras.

Its the ability to share jokes and real talk, praise and constructive criticism, that gives their bond some real depth.

It wouldnt be real if they couldnt be real with each other, Green said. Thats how I know their relationship is good. Because it is genuine.

Curry went on a tear when he started playing his game. In January, a more-aggressive Curry averaged 27.8 points and 6.9 assists for the month. And Durant averaged 27.4 points on 56.5 percent. They had worked themselves into a harmony.

But it tailed off for Durant. In February, he found himself slumping. Then Feb. 28, he suffered a knee injury that knocked him out for all but two games the rest of the season. And then he had to sit and watch himself be marginalized by the national dialogue and public opinion.

Curry flourished as the Warriors ran off a 14-game win streak. And suddenly, Durant who was anointed the Warriors best player earlier in the season was suddenly a hindrance for Curry. And you know he heard it, and it bothered him, because he addressed it after his first game back April 8.

I guess I dont make him worse after all, Durant said to the media postgame.

Through all of this, Curry and Durant have been talking and texting. They have been working out the kinks, encouraging one another, holding each other accountable. They are both invested. They have both sacrificed. They are both mature enough to say what they need to, but humble enough to accept what is being said.

I knew what I was getting into, Durant said. Ive seen so much in this league. I know how long a season is, how the ebb and flows work. You get to a point where you just want to win, man. Thats all its about.

Curry took a quick deep breath. He was about to reply to Kevin Durant, but he caught himself. Durant had just emerged from the shower, two blue towels covering most of his lankiness. The Warriors had just completed the sweep of the Jazz. Walking past his point guard, he offered Curry some advice.

Next time, make sure you towel off your back, Durant said.

The rear of his Currys white Diesel T-shirt coincidentally, the same one Green was wearing, identifiable by the crossing straps built into the back was soaking wet. Curry was about to explain, but swallowed his next words. And broke into a smile.

Thanks bro, he said to Durant. I appreciate it, man. Thanks for looking out.

Read the original:
How Kevin Durant and Steph Curry learned to share the limelight - The Mercury News

Column: How the chemistry of sunscreen is protecting your skin this Memorial Day – PBS NewsHour

No matter where your complexion falls on the Fitzpatrick Skin Type scale, ultraviolet radiation (UV) from the sun or tanning beds will damage your skin. Photo by Robert Lemann/via Adobe

Not so long ago, people like my Aunt Muriel thought of sunburn as a necessary evil on the way to a good base tan. She used to slather on the baby oil while using a large reflector to bake away. Aunt Muriels mantra when the inevitable burn and peel appeared: Beauty has its price.

Was she ever right about that price but it was a lot higher than any of us at the time recognized. What sun addicts didnt know then was that we were setting our skin up for damage to its structural proteins and DNA. Hello, wrinkles, liver spots and cancers. No matter where your complexion falls on the Fitzpatrick Skin Type scale, ultraviolet radiation (UV) from the sun or tanning beds will damage your skin.

Today, recognition of the risks posed by UV rays has motivated scientists, myself included, to study whats going on in our cells when theyre in the sun and devise modern ways to ward off that damage.

UV light that affects our skin has a shorter wavelength than the parts of the electromagnetic spectrum we can see. Photo by Inductiveload/NASA

Sunlight is composed of packets of energy called photons. The visible colors we can see by eye are relatively harmless to our skin; its the suns ultraviolet (UV) light photons that can cause skin damage. UV light can be broken down into two categories: UVA (in the wavelength range 320-400 nanometers) and UVB (in the wavelength range 280320 nm).

Our skin contains molecules that are perfectly structured to absorb the energy of UVA and UVB photons. This puts the molecule into an energetically excited state. And as the saying goes, what goes up must come down. In order to release their acquired energy, these molecules undergo chemical reactions and in the skin that means there are biological consequences.

Interestingly, some of these effects used to be considered helpful adaptations though we now recognize them as forms of damage. Tanning is due to the production of extra melanin pigment induced by UVA rays. Exposure to the sun also turns on the skins natural antioxidant network, which deactivates highly destructive reactive oxygen species (ROS) and free radicals; if left unchecked, these can cause cellular damage and oxidative stress within the skin.

We also know that UVA light penetrates deeper into the skin than UVB, destroying a structural protein called collagen. As collagen degrades, our skin loses its elasticity and smoothness, leading to wrinkles. UVA is responsible for many of the visible signs of aging, while UVB light is considered the primary source of sunburn. Think A for aging and B for burning.

DNA itself can absorb both UVA and UVB rays, causing mutations which, if unrepaired, can lead to non-melanoma (basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma) or melanoma skin cancers. Other skin molecules pass absorbed UV energy on to those highly reactive ROS and free radicals. The resulting oxidative stress can overload the skins built-in antioxidant network and cause cellular damage. ROS can react with DNA, forming mutations, and with collagen, leading to wrinkles. They can also interrupt cell signaling pathways and gene expression.

The end result of all of these photoreactions is photodamage that accumulates over the course of a lifetime from repeated exposure. And this cannot be emphasized enough this applies to all skin types, from Type I (like Nicole Kidman) to Type VI (like Jennifer Hudson). Regardless of how much melanin we have in our skin, we can develop UV-induced skin cancers and we will all eventually see the signs of photo-induced aging in the mirror.

The good news, of course, is that the risk of skin cancer and the visible signs of aging can be minimized by preventing overexposure to UV radiation. When you cant avoid the sun altogether, todays sunscreens have got your back (and all the rest of your skin too).

Sunscreens employ UV filters: molecules specifically designed to help reduce the amount of UV rays that reach through the skin surface. A film of these molecules forms a protective barrier either absorbing (chemical filters) or reflecting (physical blockers) UV photons before they can be absorbed by our DNA and other reactive molecules deeper in the skin.

In the United States, the Food and Drug Administration regulates sunscreens as drugs. Because we were historically most concerned with protecting against sunburn, 14 molecules that block sunburn-inducing UVB rays are approved for use. That we have just two UVA-blocking molecules available in the United States avobenzone, a chemical filter; and zinc oxide, a physical blocker is a testament to our more recent understanding that UVA causes trouble, not just tans.

The FDA also has enacted strict labeling requirements most obviously about SPF (sun protection factor). On labels since 1971, SPF represents the relative time it takes for an individual to get sunburned by UVB radiation. For example, if it takes 10 minutes typically to burn, then, if used correctly, an SPF 30 sunscreen should provide 30 times that 300 minutes of protection before sunburn.

Used correctly is the key phrase. Research shows that it takes about one ounce, or basically a shot glass-sized amount of sunscreen, to cover the exposed areas of the average adult body, and a nickel-sized amount for the face and neck (more or less, depending on your body size). The majority of people apply between a quarter to a half of the recommended amounts, placing their skin at risk for sunburn and photodamage.

In addition, sunscreen efficacy decreases in the water or with sweating. To help consumers, FDA now requires sunscreens labeled water-resistant or very water-resistant to last up to 40 minutes or 80 minutes, respectively, in the water, and the American Academy of Dermatology and other medical professional groups recommend reapplication immediately after any water sports. The general rule of thumb is to reapply about every two hours and certainly after water sports or sweating.

In the U.S., the FDA regulates sunscreens available to consumers. Photo by Jeff Greenberg/UIG via Getty Images

To get high SPF values, multiple UVB UV filters are combined into a formulation based upon safety standards set by the FDA. However, the SPF doesnt account for UVA protection. For a sunscreen to make a claim as having UVA and UVB protection and be labeled Broad Spectrum, it must pass FDAs Broad Spectrum Test, where the sunscreen is hit with a large does of UVB and UVA light before its effectiveness is tested.

This pre-irradiation step was established in FDAs 2012 sunscreen labeling rules and acknowledges something significant about UV-filters: some can be photolabile, meaning they can degrade under UV irradiation. The most famous example may be PABA. This UVB-absorbing molecule is rarely used in sunscreens today because it forms photoproducts that elicit an allergic reaction in some people.

But the Broad Spectrum Test really came into effect only once the UVA-absorbing molecule avobenzone came onto the market. Avobenzone can interact with octinoxate, a strong and widely used UVB absorber, in a way that makes avobenzone less effective against UVA photons. The UVB filter octocrylene, on the other hand, helps stabilize avobenzone so it lasts longer in its UVA-absorbing form. Additionally, you may notice on some sunscreen labels the molecule ethylhexyl methoxycrylene. It helps stabilize avobenzone even in the presence of octinoxate, and provides us with longer-lasting protection against UVA rays.

Next up in sunscreen innovation is the broadening of their mission. Because even the highest SPF sunscreens dont block 100 percent of UV rays, the addition of antioxidants can supply a second line of protection when the skins natural antioxidant defenses are overloaded. Some antioxidant ingredients my colleagues and I have worked with include to
copheral acetate (Vitamin E), sodium ascorbyl phosophate (Vitamin C), and DESM. And sunscreen researchers are beginning to investigate if the absorption of other colors of light, like infrared, by skin molecules has a role to play in photodamage.

As research continues, one thing we know for certain is that protecting our DNA from UV damage, for people of every color, is synonymous with preventing skin cancers. The Skin Cancer Foundation, American Cancer Society and the American Academy of Dermatology all stress that research shows regular use of an SPF 15 or higher sunscreen prevents sunburn and reduces the risk of non-melanoma cancers by 40 percent and melanoma by 50 percent.

We can still enjoy being in the sun. Unlike my Aunt Muriel and us kids in the 1980s, we just need to use the resources available to us, from long sleeves to shade to sunscreens, in order to protect the molecules in our skin, especially our DNA, from UV damage.

Kerry Hanson is a research chemist at the University of California, Riverside. She has consulted for Bayer, J&J/Neutrogena and P&G. Her academic work has been funded by Hallstar and through a joint University of California Discovery Grant with Merck. She is a member of the American Chemical Society. This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article here.

Here is the original post:
Column: How the chemistry of sunscreen is protecting your skin this Memorial Day - PBS NewsHour

Team chemistry, NFL pain management and Mexico looks to the NCAA – ESPN

sports + biz + culture + life Get REDEF delivered to your inbox

rantnrave:// How should MLB respond to the racist abuse Adam Jones took in Boston Monday night? MLB must act quickly and strongly, and words won't be enough. It's not just because of a sense of moral righteousness -- though that is important too -- but because MLB is in a different position than other major sports. The league sits on a razor's edge. "Baseball is a white man's sport," Jones said in September, and while that may not be altogether true, MLB does have a much lower count of African-American players than the NBA and NFL. MLB has long been a home for culture wars. Lately, that has been seen in the debate over how the game is played -- specifically how much fun and celebration should be allowed. Playing the "right way" has been accused of being code for playing the "white way." In European soccer, fans' racist acts can lead to games in empty stadiums or repercussions for the team itself. That's the sort of baseline MLB must set here, too. There are remorseful statements and there is action. We've seen the former. Will we get the latter? ... Mets fans, I love you, but you're weird. Having your ashes dumped into Citi Field toilets may cross the fine line between being a fan and the kind of fanaticism that extends into the afterlife. ... I wonder if Derek Jeter is just the beginning of the athlete-turned-owner life cycle. Magic Johnson and Michael Jordan are owners too, but they made their wealth as much off the field as on it. Jeter starred during a generation when sports paychecks grew into the hundreds of millions of dollars -- enough to make sizable contributions to investments in teams. And there is enough evidence that being just an ex-jock is no longer enough. Athletes want to be entrepreneurs and investors and owners. Being only the face of a product isn't cool anymore. ... Kerith Burke, a former SNY broadcaster, wrote a poignant essay about her struggle to find a new job in the TV industry. It puts a fine point on the changing nature of sports programming.

What makes a group of athletes greater than the sum of its parts? Adam Willis | Slate

Amid concerns about pro football's overreliance on opioids and other painkillers, many see cannabis as an effective and safer alternative. Rick Maese | The Washington Post

Esports are uniquely vulnerable to a widespread match fixing scandal. Can a network of organizations prevent it before it begins? B. David Zarley | Vice Sports

The rigorous activity is dominated by female athletes -- and is growing in legitimacy and popularity. Elisabeth Sherman | The Atlantic

Cetys University is making an ambitious bid to become the first Mexican member of the NCAA. Marc Tracy | The New York Times

"It's not enough to be smart. You have to be curious."

Get REDEF delivered to your inbox

Follow this link:
Team chemistry, NFL pain management and Mexico looks to the NCAA - ESPN

Quantifying changes in surface chemistry of woody plants during … – Phys.Org

May 3, 2017 ORNL researchers used sophisticated laser scanning techniques to compare the breakdown of fermented popular (B) compared with unfermented popular (A), as they quantified, for the first time, chemical changes in the cell walls surface. Credit: Oak Ridge National Laboratory

A bottleneck to breaking down woody plants for use in biofuels or other products may occur at the plant cell wall's surface, according to a new Oak Ridge National Laboratory study.

Researchers exposed samples of non-pretreated poplar to a microorganism called Clostridium thermocellum. The team found that the breakdown of carbohydrates during microbial fermentation ceased prematurely in the secondary cell wall, when the plant's sugar material was only about 30 percent processed.

"The surface quickly goes through significant changes and becomes non-productive for further degradation by enzymes even as 70 percent of usable plant sugars are still trapped in the cell wall structure," said ORNL's Alexandru Dumitrache.

While further research is required to resolve the holdup, results of the study published in Green Chemistry for the first time quantified the changes in the surface chemistry.

Explore further: Microscopybiomass close-up

More information: Alexandru Dumitrache et al. Cellulose and lignin colocalization at the plant cell wall surface limits microbial hydrolysis of Populus biomass, Green Chem. (2017). DOI: 10.1039/C7GC00346C

Oak Ridge National Laboratory scientists created an approach to get a better look at plant cell wall characteristics at high resolution as they create more efficient, less costly methods to deconstruct biomass.

Plant cell wall growth is typically described as a simple process, but researchers using a microscope that can resolve images on the nanoscale level have observed something more complex.

Scientists have mapped changes in composition of plant cell walls over space and time, providing new insights into the development and growth of all plants.

To make biofuels, tiny microbes can be used to break down plant cells. As part of that digestive process, specialized enzymes break down cellulosea major molecule that makes plant cell walls rigid. Scientists showed that ...

Comparison of 3D TEM imaging techniques reveals never-seen-before details of plant cell walls, according to a study published September 10, 2014 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Purbasha Sarkar from University of California, ...

In a breakthrough that could make the production of cellulosic ethanol less expensive, Cornell researchers have discovered a class of plant enzymes that potentially could allow plant materials used to make ethanol to be broken ...

Imagine a raincoat that heals a scratch by shedding the part of the outer layer that's damaged. To create such a material, scientists have turned to nature for inspiration. They report in ACS' journal Langmuir a water-repellant ...

Discovering a way to harness ice recrystallization could enable fabrication of highly efficient materials for a range of products, including porous electrodes for batteries and transparent conducting films used to manufacture ...

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory scientists and academic collaborators have demonstrated the synthesis of transparent glass through 3-D printing, a development that could ultimately lead to altering the design and structure ...

Polymeric aerogels are nanoporous structures that combine some of the most desirable characteristics of materials, such as flexibility and mechanical strength. It is nearly impossible to improve on a substance considered ...

Biology must be in a hurry. In balancing speed and accuracy to duplicate DNA, produce proteins and carry out other processes, evolution has apparently determined that speed is of higher priority, according to Rice University ...

(Phys.org)Drug design involves guided trial-and-error. How the body metabolizes a particular drug is important for determining drug efficacy. There have been many studies to understand how xenobiotics interact with cytochrome ...

Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more

Originally posted here:
Quantifying changes in surface chemistry of woody plants during ... - Phys.Org

Ex-chemistry professor to run for Congress – Chemistry World (subscription)

Former chemistry professor Phil Janowicz is running for Congress for the first time in an attempt to unseat Republican Ed Royce, who has been a Californian representative for 25 years. Janowicz says he is running for Congress to oppose Trumps agenda, noting that his opponent has voted in lockstep with the president. The congressional election takes place in November 2018.

As a chemistry teacher here at California State Fullerton, I was constantly amazed by the grit and determination of my students, Janowicz said in a speech at the university on 25 April to announce his Democratic candidacy. When I learned how many of my students were struggling to meet basic food and housing needs, I decided that I had to do more than teach chemistry.

Janowicz tells Chemistry World that he was deeply affected by the plight of his students, even beyond the issue of crippling student loan debt. He recounts how many of those he taught were afraid for their parents to attend graduation due to concerns about deportation. The students, themselves US citizens, were fearful that their parents would be put at risk by attending because they lacked proper documentation.

After beginning his teaching at California State Fullerton in 2010, Janowicz left academia shortly after securing tenure to launch an education consultancy in January 2017.

In announcing his candidacy, Janowicz said he is running for Congress to resist the Trump agenda, and criticised his opponents record of voting with Trump 96% of the time. This was an apparent reference to a figure put forward by the polling data analysis website FiveThirtyEight to reflect how often Royce voted in line with the presidents positions.

Janowicz is concerned about the lack of scientists and individuals with science, technology, engineering and mathematics backgrounds in Congress. We need to tackle the problems of today with data we need to bring scientists back into public office, he says. Janowicz points to a proposal from the Trump administration to pull the earth science division out of Nasa, and warns that this will stymie the agencys ability to gather critical data from its satellites. If they cant collect the data, we cant even report on what is going on, he says.

Nevertheless, Janowicz acknowledges that going up against a Washington DC career politician will not be easy. He has raised about $30,000 (23,000) over the past few days, and the goal is at least $200,000 by late June when the filing period ends. Meanwhile, records indicate that Royces campaign has raised over $2.8 million.

See more here:
Ex-chemistry professor to run for Congress - Chemistry World (subscription)

Dryden middle, high schools to remain closed after chemical fire … – CNYcentral.com

DRYDEN, N.Y.

Dryden Middle and High Schools will remain closed on Wednesday after closing early Tuesday due to a small chemical fire, according to school officials.

Authorities say the fire started in a trash can in a chemistry lab on school property. No one was reportedly injured during the fire.

The fire started when a student cleaning up wiped a container with a chemical on it and tossed the paper towel in the trash. Another student then threw away a wet paper in the same trash can which caused a reaction and sparked the fire.

A teacher was able to quickly put the flames out with an extinguisher. Students and faculty were instructed to evacuate the building at the time of the fire.

School officials along with the Dryden Fire Department decided it was best to dismiss school so the incident could be fully evaluated.

The Superintendent of Dryden Central Schools said the middle and high schools will stay closed on Wednesday so crews can conduct air quality tests as precaution.

Dryden Fire Department along with Dryden Ambulance, Ithaca Fire Department, Dryden Police Department, and New York State Police all were called to the scene to investigate.

Continue reading here:
Dryden middle, high schools to remain closed after chemical fire ... - CNYcentral.com