Is the iPad Radiology’s Dream Device For Mobile Healthcare?

One could substitute "pathology" for "radiology" given similar workflow and resolution issues and make the same arguments...

Is the iPad radiology's dream device for mobile healthcare?
By Erik L. Ridley
AuntMinnie staff writer
June 24, 2010

It's the mobile device that's taking the consumer electronics world by storm. But does the iPad have a role in medical imaging? Early adopters say yes -- they believe the iPad could unlock the potential of mobile computing in radiology.


The iPad has only been on the market for three months, but it has already generated significant interest and enthusiasm among radiologists and referring physicians. Efforts to define the role of the iPad in radiology are still in their early stages, but a number of researchers and vendors active in developing software applications for the iPad believe it could fulfill a role in bringing access to images and advanced visualization technology to the point of care.

Widespread utilization, however, will require addressing a number of challenges, not the least of which is security.

Packing a punch

The iPad owes its potential in radiology to its mix of size, portability, battery life, and relatively high spatial and contrast resolution, said Mark McEntee, PhD, a lecturer of diagnostic imaging at the University College Dublin School of Medicine and Medical Science in Dublin, Ireland.

The iPad's vital statistics also compare favorably to the previous mobile platform of choice, the iPhone. The iPad's 9.7-inch display provides 1024 x 768-pixel resolution at 132 pixels per inch (PPI), while the iPhone 4 has a 3.5-inch (diagonal) display with a resolution of 640 x 960, although the iPhone sports 326 PPI. The iPad weighs just 1.5 lb, much less than most conventional laptops.

The larger display allows images to be displayed at or closer to their native resolution than they would on smaller portable devices, McEntee said. The battery life of the iPad is also an advantage over the iPhone; McEntee reported using the iPad for two busy days of eight-hour use without having to recharge.

"The sleep mode is fast and responsive and uses tiny amounts of energy," McEntee said. "This is a huge advantage [over] the iPhone, whose battery finds it hard to keep up with the demands of the power-hungry display."

Clinical benefit

The iPad will likely have significantly more value within a clinical environment than the iPhone, said Mark Cain, chief technology officer of advanced visualization firm MIMvista of Cleveland.

"When you consider sitting with a patient and explaining the results of a scan, there is nothing more personal than being side-by-side, images in hand," he said. "The iPhone is the more portable choice and will be better suited for those who need access at any time, not just in the hospital."

The additional resolution on the iPad is like gold for a radiologist, Cain said.

"The amount of panning required to see a large image is significantly reduced, and that saves time," he said.

The most obvious uses for the iPad in radiology include reviewing images, reading reports, and accessing medical records, said Janice Honeyman-Buck, PhD, editor in chief of the Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine's Journal of Digital Imaging.

In addition to the larger, high-quality screen, physicians will appreciate the speed of the iPad, Honeyman-Buck said in an e-mail to AuntMinnie.com.

"It turns on quickly, seems to open and display websites and documents faster than most laptops, and it is easy and intuitive to use," she said.

The ability to provide mobile and secure access to scheduling, patient information, historical images, and other key information without being tied down to a PC offers an opportunity for efficiency gains, said Paul Merrild, senior vice president of marketing and business development at advanced visualization and healthcare IT developer Merge Healthcare of Milwaukee.

"iPads can theoretically contain the entire electronic record of the patient's imaging experience, and can be handed along the workflow as needed," Merrild said. "At the end, the iPad has potential to provide a nice teaching and communication tool between the radiologist, referring physician, and the patient."

Radiologists could review a worklist, see overall activity within the imaging practice, view preliminary images from a technologist, or sign reports using the iPad, Merrild said. The iPad could also provide access to the Web for reference information and offer instant viewing of an electronic health record (EHR).

"This device can facilitate movement of studies as needed, communication among anyone involved in a study, and sharing of images with patients," Merrild said. "In a hospital setting, images could be given to all clinical team members at the patient's bedside. The iPad could, in essence, become a portable film jacket, but one with so much more information included."

MIMvista's Cain said that every imaging application would be compelling on the iPad.

"When you consider that the iPhone screen already makes some PACS viewers from the past look dull, the iPad is just brilliant," Cain said. "Furthermore, we think every current HIS/EMR/PACS system could have an iPad interface. It seems like it would be much more economical for hospitals to have personnel carrying iPads than hundreds of PCs taking up space in every room."

The iPad also shows promise for viewing images from PACS and viewing live procedure video, according to Tony Molinari, vice president of sales and marketing at PACS developer Foresight Imaging of Lowell, MA.

3D content

Thanks to its larger size and improved resolution, the iPad offers more potential than the iPhone for using thin-client advanced visualization software, said Vikram Simha, chief technology officer at advanced visualization firm Vital Images of Minnetonka, MN. The company has seen interest from a number of its customers in using the iPad with its 3D software.

"We see a good opportunity for bringing image/result review to the bedside with an iPad to improve communication between radiology and the referring physician," Simha told AuntMinnie.com. "It has the right form factor and resolution to bring advanced visualization to the referring physician, closer to patient care."

The iPad also offers the potential for delivering interactive, rich 3D content directly into the hands of a surgeon or other referring physicians, according to Robert Taylor, PhD, president and CEO of advanced visualization vendor TeraRecon of San Mateo, CA. The iPad's design as primarily a content viewer rather than a content production device even fits radiology's traditional workflow model.

"This 'consumption' of content created by radiology, without much ability to 'create' content directly, seems to be a great fit for the respective roles and goals of radiology and its physician customers," Taylor said.

Primary diagnosis?

But don't expect radiologists to ditch their PACS workstations and start interpreting images on iPads any time soon. The iPad would not be suitable for primary diagnosis due to its contrast ratio (maximum luminance/minimum luminance) and calibration issues, McEntee said.

For example, the iPad has a maximum luminance of 270 cd/m2, which, while higher than the average of 150-200 cd/m2 seen in off-the-shelf displays, is much lower than your average primary interpretation display, which has an average maximum luminance of 500-600 cd/m2. The iPad's minimum luminance is 0.3 cd/m2, which yields a still impressive contrast ratio of 900:1 for a portable device; the iPhone and Dell Axim v51 both have a contrast ratio of 100:1, McEntee said.

Display calibration is also an issue, McEntee said. "The iPad cannot currently be calibrated as software [and] cannot be installed in the normal way; presumably, we would 'need an app for that,' " he told AuntMinnie.com.

In addition to commercial offerings, the popular open-source OsiriX DICOM image viewer will undoubtedly make its way to the iPad, although an iPad-specific version is not yet available.

The current OsiriX version for the iPhone can be viewed on the iPad's full screen using the iPad's 2x button. However, this magnification can accentuate the resolution differences between the iPad and iPhone, leading to grainy text. "Presumably, later releases will solve this," McEntee said.

An OsiriX version for the iPad is listed as "soon available," according to a January 29, 2010, post on the OsiriX website.

Ed Heere, president and CEO of CoActiv Medical Business Solutions of Ridgefield, CT, said the company's OsiriX-integrated iPhone application can work well on the iPad as a temporary solution, providing four times the viewing size as measured in square inches as the iPhone when using the viewer's 2x button.

"The high-resolution iPad screen provides a bright, crisp image even at the enlarged size," Heere said. "Future iPad-specific apps will allow simultaneous viewing of current and prior studies as well as multiple series/image windows and much greater add-in functionality."

Other educational apps will also likely find use on the iPad, McEntee said.

Limitations

For all of its advantages, the iPad does come with some limitations to its use in radiology applications. One of the main concerns with clinical use of the iPad is the security of patient information and loss or theft of the device, McEntee said.

"To comply with HIPAA, the iPad would have to be locked with a pass key and the access to imaging should be via a Web server," McEntee said. "This should be password-authenticated and encrypted."

Also, no images should be stored on the device itself, he said.

"The locked-down nature of the hardware for the iPad means that it is very difficult to operate as a replacement for a laptop," McEntee said. "You cannot save files to the iPad; although certain apps allow a similar functionality, this seeming disadvantage makes it more secure from an imaging perspective. If lost, you can be assured that -- provided the previous user logged out -- there are no patient data on the iPad."

Hospital IT departments will have to work on the logistics of ensuring secure access to data, according to Honeyman-Buck. "These devices cannot be left lying around where another person could access protected patient information," she said.

The tablet PC's larger size can also be a detriment. Because it won't fit in a pocket, it will need some sort of shoulder-strap cover that doesn't impede the physician's easy access to the screen, Honeyman-Buck said.

In contrast to the more mobile form factor provided by the iPhone, the iPad would probably take the place of a patient chart -- kept in a slot on a bed or a wall, and picked up by various different users when access to enterprise data is needed, TeraRecon's Taylor said.

"So, the iPad will need some software changes to find a niche in healthcare, because it will need to be a locked-down, tightly controlled IT asset accessible safely by multiple users -- in that regard, it's not there yet," Taylor said.

The weight of the iPad can make it difficult to carry around and use, Foresight's Molinari said. In addition, it suffers from connectivity issues (such as no USB support).

And institutions need to be aware of more than just the physical security of the iPad. A virtual private network (VPN) will be required to use the iPad for secure, HIPAA-compliant remote viewing of images, CoActiv's Heere said.

"Perhaps future Apple [operating system] versions and future apps will allow the use of SSL connectivity like on our PC platforms, eliminating the need for VPN tunnels," Heere said.

FDA impact

Also yet to be determined is the impact on the iPad of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) decision earlier this year to classify MIMvista's Mobile MIM iPhone image viewing software as a class III device requiring premarket approval (PMA). If the FDA's decision stands, it could hamstring the development of commercial image review apps by requiring software developers to go through the time-consuming PMA process.

Indeed, MIMvista's Cain believes that the FDA's logic in regulating iPhone software would also apply to the iPad.

"The iPad makes portable image viewing significantly more usable and practical, which seems to challenge the claim that it is not a medical device," he said.

Merge's Merrild said that his company believes there will not be issues with the FDA regarding radiology workflow tasks such as scheduling, insurance verification, billing, and report viewing.

"Even with very limited image viewing capabilities -- without the presence of measurement tools or advanced features such as [multiplanar reformatting] or angle measurements -- this will likely be acceptable to regulators and users," Merrild said.

In the meantime, innovation in terms of mobile image review will definitely be limited until the FDA or other authorities in other jurisdictions provide a clear ruling on the use of these devices as part of a diagnostic toolset, Merrild said.

"We have confidence that these regulatory issues will eventually be resolved," Merrild said. "We believe the larger issue facing patient safety in radiology currently is the use of open-source [non-FDA approved] software on workstations."

CoActiv's Heere believes the initial and somewhat undefined position of the FDA on the use of mobile devices in radiology will ultimately be resolved in favor of a "patient care" approach.

"A strict interpretation of some of the current information would suggest that even the use of laptop or notebook computers would require a PMA for use in radiology," Heere said. "This would create a real problem for the hundreds of thousands of current users of these existing mobile devices. Until a formal published position is released by the FDA, we stand by our original position that the iPhone and iPad use of any of our products is strictly for review purposes and not for any diagnostic or interpretive use."

By Erik L. Ridley
AuntMinnie.com staff writer
June 24, 2010


Scientists Create 3D Models of Whole Mouse Organs

Yale University engineers have for the first time created 3D models of whole intact mouse organs, a feat they accomplished using fluorescence microscopy. The team reports its findings in the May/June issue of the Journal of Biomedical Optics, in a study published online this week.

Combining an imaging technique called multiphoton microscopy with “optical clearing,” which uses a solution that renders tissue transparent, the researchers were able to scan mouse organs and create high-resolution images of the brain, small intestine, large intestine, kidney, lung and testicles. They then created 3D models of the complete organs—a feat that, until now, was only possible by slicing the organs into thin sections or destroying them in the process, a disadvantage if more information about the sample is needed after the fact.

With traditional microscopy, researchers are only able to image tissues up to depths on the order of 300 microns, or about three times the thickness of a human hair. In that process, tissue samples are cut into thin slices, stained with dyes to highlight different structures and cell types, individually imaged, then stacked back together to create 3D models. The Yale team, by contrast, was able to avoid slicing or staining the organs by relying on natural fluorescence generated from the tissue itself.

When combined with optical clearing, multiphoton microscopy—so called because it uses photons to excite naturally fluorescent cells within the tissue—can image a larger field-of-view at much greater depths and is limited only by the size of the lens used. Once the tissue is cleared using a standard solution that makes it virtually transparent to optical light, the researchers shine different wavelengths of light on it to excite the inherently fluorescent tissue. The fluorescence is displayed as different colors that highlight the different structures and tissue types (in the lung, for example, collagen is depicted as green while elastin shows up as red).

“The intrinsic fluorescence is just as effective as conventional staining techniques,” said Michael Levene, associate professor at the Yale School of Engineering & Applied Science and the team leader. “It’s like creating a virtual 3D biopsy that can be manipulated at will. And you have the added benefit that the tissue remains intact even after it’s been imaged.”

The Yale team was able to reach depths in excess of two millimeters—deep enough to image complete mouse organs. Typical tissue samples taken during patient biopsies are about this size as well, meaning the new technique could be used to create 3D models of biopsies, Levene said. This could be especially useful in tissues where the direction of a cancerous growth may make it difficult to know how to slice tissue sample, he noted.

In addition, the technology could eventually be used to trace fluorescent proteins in the mouse brain and see where different genes are expressed, or to trace where drugs travel in the body using fluorescent tagging, for example.

“Fluorescence microscopy plays such a key role throughout biology and medicine,” Leven said. “The range of applications of this technique is immense, including everything from improved evaluation of patient tissue biopsies to fundamental studies of how the brain is wired.”

Other authors of the paper include Sonia Parra, Thomas Chia and Joseph Zinter, all of Yale University.

Citation: Journal of Biomedical Optics 15(3), 036017 (May/June 2010)

Fuel Efficient Cars

When a car company, either foreign or domestic comes on our market that gets 40+ mpg, Detroit is effective in killing it; despite the public wanting it. The claims they make you have heard; "ther're small and uncomfortable"; "ther're not safe", etc. The only reason they say this is to prevent the pu

Ventilator Fan Question

Just ANOTHER DUMB QUESTION:

I am using a circular fan with these specs:

42"blades 14,445 cfm 500rpms 1/2 hp 7.6 amps.

The metal shroud around the entire fan is 20" wide.

The fan exhausts air from inside the shop outward, into the yard.

Does extending the shroud aro

WANT Part X: The TARDIS. A REAL TARDIS! | Bad Astronomy

tardisOh, this is nice, someone is auctioning off a nice replica TARDIS from Doctor Who and it looks pretty good, and in fact OMG IT’S AN ACTUAL TARDIS FROM THE FIRST SERIES OF DOCTOR WHO SQUUUEEEEEE!

Seriously. An actual TARDIS from the show is being auctioned. It’s from 2005, and was used during the first series by Christopher Eccleston and Billie Piper. How awesome is this?

Incredibly, the expected price is less than $20,000! Who out there in BA land wants to send me a check? I’ll let you play in the TARDIS if you do*.

Wow. If someone out there reading this does somehow manage to score this, let me know so I can come over and play. Wow.

Tip o’ the sonic screwdriver to Crunchgear and BABloggee Doug Troy.


* Offer not valid nor to be taken seriously outside the Medusa Cascade.


Related posts:

- WANT Part IX: Levitating TARDIS edition
- WANT Part VIII: Zen and the art of Apollo maintenance
- WANT Part VII: Sink or swim


Recommended Products For Noise Reduction.

I'm just looking for some recommendations on products that effectively block background noise (television, radio, conversations). Short of digging deep into my pocket for a Bose noise canceling headset, I wanted to know if anyone knows of / has used a product to muffle general background noise.

Three Phase Variable Frequency Drive

I'm currently using a 240vac Variable Frequency Drive that is in a control enclosure that I supply to a customer. The VFD runs off 240vac single phase ( two hot legs and a ground ) and outputs 240vac three phase for a 7.5hp motor. The question I'm being asked is the following: "VFD is going to Aust

Will Methane Gas in Gulf Waters Create a Massive Dead Zone? | 80beats

oil-slickPerhaps it’s a disservice to continue calling the oil pouring into the Gulf a spill. “Spill” makes it hard to conceptualize the estimated 60,000 barrels of oil per day blasting up from a well more than 5,000 feet below sea level. It also makes it difficult to picture how, as BP estimates, as much as 40 percent of the material “spilling” is methane gas. That methane has been largely overshadowed by the horror of oil-soaked pelicans and tar balls washing ashore, but now a survey, completed on Monday, has measured how the methane has spread.

What’s the problem with methane? The microbes that feed off it. It can create “methane seep ecosystems”–shallow food chains that eat crude oil and dissolved methane and in the process consume all available oxygen, leaving nothing for other marine life forms. Bacteria eat the methane and “ice worms” (so-called because they live around ice-like methane hydrate) eat bacteria, but nothing else eats these worms. This creates a “dead zone.”

So in short [an abundance of creatures that use] methane for food and oxygen to “breathe” will create areas where only bacteria and a few other non-life sustaining organisms can live. All others die. [San Francisco Chronicle]

John Kessler, a Texas A&M University oceanography professor, finished a ten-day exploration of the spill earlier this week, measuring levels of dissolved methane around 4,500 feet under the water’s surface from 35 different sites, the furthest seven miles from the spill.

Levels of methane in deep-ocean waters near the Deepwater Horizon oil spill are 10,000 to 100,000 times higher than normal, and in some very hot spots “we saw them approaching 1 million times above” what would be normal, says ocean chemist John Kessler. [USA Today]

Kessler’s team also measured the levels of oxygen depletion–the sign that microbes are feeding on the methane. These numbers varied.

“At some locations, we saw depletions of up to 30 percent of oxygen based on its natural concentration in the waters. At other places, we saw no depletion of oxygen in the waters. We need to determine why that is,” he told the briefing. [Reuters]

We’ll have to wait for further results to see if the dissolved methane is indeed fueling a new dead zone in the Gulf. As Science Insider reports, Kessler and David Valentine, an oceanographer at the University of California, Santa Barbara, also hope that measuring the dissolved methane may be a way to quantify the extent of the spreading oil.

Recent posts on the Gulf Oil Spill:
80beats: From Marsh Grass to Manatees: The Next Wave of Life Endangered by BP’s Oil
80beats: Obama’s Speech on the Oil Spill: What Do You Think of His “Battle Plan”?
80beats: BP to Kevin Costner: We’ll Take 32 of Your Oil Clean-up Machines
80beats: Should We Just Euthanize the Gulf’s Oil-Soaked Birds?

Image: NASA and the MODIS Rapid Response Team


Gina Elise, Pin Up for Vets, on the passing of Edith Shain

by Gina Elise

From the Washington Post, June 24 "Edith Shain, nurse kissing Navy man in Eisenstaedt's WWII photo, dies at 91":

Edith Shain, 91, widely believed to be the uniformed nurse whose lip-locking embrace with a Navy sailor at the end of World War II was captured in a photograph that became one of the most iconic images of the time, died of cancer June 20 at her home in Los Angeles.

Ms. Shain was working at Doctors Hospital in New York on Aug, 14, 1945, the day the war ended with the surrender of Japanese troops. She and thousands of other jubilant New Yorkers flooded Times Square, where a young man in Navy blues was smooching women as he made his way through the crowd.

"Someone grabbed me and kissed me, and I let him because he fought for his country," Ms. Shain said. "I closed my eyes when I kissed him. I never saw him."

The phrase is true: A picture is worth a thousands words.

Edith's picture in Times Square personified the exuberance of America's victory at the end of WWII. Images last forever. This image will illustrate for generations to come the joy of returning home from war--and that is timeless. Google lists this picture as the most famous kiss ever.

Although Edith has passed, this shot will remain forever in people's hearts. This homecoming will be forever repeated as long as Americans go off to war. I posted this picture today on Facebook, in honor of Edith, and received a comment from a mother: "I was sad to hear of her passing. Seeing this picture is always stirring but especially right now since my soldier just returned home yesterday."

I feel very honored to have participated in parades with such an iconic figure. I hope that my Pin-Ups For Vets photos also inspire boosts in morale for our troops who are looking forward to returning home.

From the Editor - regular readers of Libertarian Republican may be aware that our friend Gina is the saluting navy gal at the top of our blog. We've promoted her most wonderful charity effort PinUpforVets.com over the years. She's even been a guest twice on "Libertarian Politics Live." We urge our readers to contribute to Gina's very worthy cause, to help our Veterans in VA hospitals nationwide.

I served in the US Navy, 1981-85 aboard the USS Kittyhawk CV 63, and USS Luce DDG-38, Persian Gulf War, and Indian Ocean.

The Part of the Brain That Lets the Blind See Without Seeing | 80beats

blindThe weird phenomenon of blindsight—in which people take in visual information about objects without actually “seeing” them—has long intrigued scientists, and with good reason. They’ve watched people navigate obstacle courses and identify colors while being technically blind. This week, in a study in Nature, neuroscientists point to a part of the brain called the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) as the neural key that might make blindsight possible.

They used macaques in which the primary visual cortex had been destroyed. The monkeys’ eye-focusing movements revealed that they were “seeing” images shown at the periphery of their visual field, but only if their LGN was intact [New Scientist].

The authors refer to the LGN as the “main relay” between the retina and main visual cortex.

Other work had shown that the LGN also has projections to a number of secondary visual areas, suggesting that it may serve as a major hub in the visual system. To test this suggestion, the authors injected the LGN with a chemical that activates the receptor for a major inhibitory signaling molecule…. When the chemical is present, nerve cells receive a signal telling them to stop signaling, so this this injection has the effect of shutting the LGN down entirely [Ars Technica].

When the scientists shut down the LGN, the primates in the study didn’t experience any blindsight, as it appears no information was reaching any of their brains’ visual centers.

Related Content:
DISCOVER: What You See Is What You Don’t
80beats: Blind Man Navigates an Obstacle Course Using Only “Blindsight”
80beats: By Developing “Blindsight,” Stroke Patients Can See—And Drive—Again

Image: iStockphoto


Perodua Myvi Auto Gearbox Reverse Jerking

anyone know how to fix the gearbox problem? or where can i find a honest mechanic in malaysia to fix the gearbox problems?

when i put in reverse gear, the gear doesn't engage immediately, it only engage after 5-10 seconds.

after the reserve gear engage, the whole car jerking/shaking

Democrat Rep. Kanjorski of Pennsylvania – "Defective Americans"

From Eric Dondero:

Provided by the office of House Republican Minority Whip Rep. Eric Cantor. Stunning statement from a ranking Democrat in the House. While defending against a provision in the Financial Regulatory bill, longtime Pennsylvania Congressman Paul Kanjorski says those affected are not just "minorities, or defective Americans..."

Kanjorski obviously mis-spoke in referring to the handicapped, disabled Veterans, and those with special needs. But if a Republican would have used such a term?

Bonobo Handshake: A Review | The Intersection

I begin with a full disclosure: As many readers know, Vanessa Woods is one of my very best friends. I love spending time with her because she's insightful, outrageous, brilliant, and funny. And I can sincerely say I love her new memoir, Bonobo Handshake for the very same reasons. But most of all, I'm recommending this book because it's so important. At the start of Bonobo Handshake, we're introduced to Vanessa as she sets off rather haphazardly on an adventure to Africa with her new husband, Duke anthropologist Brian Hare. By the end, she--and we--are not the same. Woven in between is a beautiful and complex narrative about people and other primates that slowly unravels what's really at stake. There were times I laughed out loud reading about the challenges of working with a species that--yes--famously approaches sex as easily as humans would a handshake. But there is a lot more to bonobos than their sexual behavior. Just as Jane Goodall documented the unforgettable antics of chimpanzees like Flossie and David Greybeard, Vanessa brings us into the world of 'Empress' Mimi, mischievous and lovable Malou, and my favorite bonobo of all, sweet little Lodja. It's easy to fall in love with all ...


David X. Cohen on the New Season of Futurama (New Episode Spoilers!) | Discoblog

NEXT>

FuturamaAmyTonight’s the night: Futurama returns with fresh episodes on Comedy Central, starting at 10 PM Eastern Time. Two weeks ago we featured our conversation with Billy West, the voice actor behind Fry, Professor Farnsworth, and other characters. Today, it’s executive producer David X. Cohen, who worked on The Simpsons before creating Futurama with Matt Groening more than a decade ago.

Cohen discusses how he went from scientist to comedy writer, the logic (or illogic) behind heads in jars, why things still don’t work in the 31st century, and how he sneaks math jokes into the show.

*Plus, read through to the end for some spoilers about the plots of some new episodes coming this season.

DISCOVER Magazine: I feel compelled to ask: Does the X stand for anything? Or is it like the Harry Truman S, and it stands for nothing?

David X Cohen: I’ll get that off my chest right off the bat: It’s a fraudulent middle initial, but there is a logic behind it. The reason for that is the writer’s guild, which has a regulation that no two writers can have the same name for on-screen credits. So, when you join the union, if your name is already taken, you have to change your name. Being named David Cohen—as you can imagine, there were several other David Cohens already in the guild, [and] one with my actual middle initial, S, for Samuel.

So, I decided to go for the craziest most sci-fi letter available, X.

DM: Both of your parents were scientists, correct?

DXC: Yes. Both PhDs in biology. I grew up in a house that was very science-oriented. The family activities we did were usually science-related—trips to the zoo or the museum of natural history in New York. So it was just taken for granted—by me at least—that I would be a scientist sooner or later. I tended to gravitate, though, more toward the physical sciences and math and computer science and physics, and I actually majored in physics in college. So, my undergraduate degree is in physics, and then I got a master’s degree in theoretical computer science as well. Before I derailed.

DM: How did you “derail?”

DXC: When I was growing up I just wasn’t really aware that there were careers such as writing cartoons. It wasn’t something that anybody I knew did and never popped into my mind. But then, when I went off to college, I worked on the Harvard Lampoon humor magazine, and suddenly I did know some people who had the career goal of becoming writers, or specifically, comedy writers.

And after that, I was somewhat torn. Should I continue down my path to be a scientist, or should I pursue this thing which (I thought) I did for fun? Ultimately, [I decided] I would like to go to graduate school before forgetting everything I did as an undergraduate. I went to UC Berkeley and had a good time there, but got to the point where I had reached the end of the line of what I was working on, and I had to reevaluate. I decided I might rather try the other option after all.

It worked out. So, my leave of absence from graduate school is still in progress.

Next: Fermat’s Last Theorem, Star Trek, and suicide booths


NEXT>


The lines in the sky are stars | Bad Astronomy

Gifted astrophotographer Stéphane Guisard — whose Easter Island picture garnered him the #3 spot in my Top Ten Astronomy Pictures of 2009 — has done it again. He just published this amazing picture of star trails, but it’s not like one you’ve ever seen:

guisard_startrails

[Click to see a bigger, cleaner pic, and yes, you really want to!]

This astonishing picture shows the entire sky from horizon to horizon with the help of a wide angle lens (to help orient you, south is to the left, north to the right, west at the bottom, and east is at the top). It was taken on a volcano called Chimborazo, which is in Ecuador. The volcano has a latitude of 1.5° south, so it sits almost exactly on the Equator [Update: Stéphane sent me a note that he has been to this volcano before, and has an amazing Milky Way picture taken from it.] Guisard started the exposure about an hour after sunset, once the sky got dark, and ended 10 hours later, about an hour before sunrise. Because of this, it shows roughly 90% of the entire visible sky!

How can this be?

If you’ve ever been to this blog before, you know I’ll be happy to explain. But it takes a minute, so I’ve split the rest of this post up into two sections: you can read about the guts of how this picture works just below, or you can skip to the part where I describe what’s in it (stars and so on). Enjoy.

1) How this can be:

[First, a note: when I say "entire sky", I mean the whole thing, like you were floating out in deep space and could see in every direction with nothing blocking your way. It would feel like you were in the center of a sphere with the stars surrounding you no matter which way you look. On Earth at any one moment, the most you can see is 1/2 the sky, because the Earth itself blocks your view.]

OK, we need a a little geometry lesson. Imagine you are standing on the north pole. As the Earth spins under you, the stars appear to make circles centered directly over your head. Polaris would make a tiny little circle in 24 hours (it’s not exactly on the north celestial pole, the point in the sky directly over the Earth’s north pole, but it’s close), and stars farther from the pole would make bigger circles. At the horizon, the circles would be biggest.

But that’s all you could see. The Earth itself blocks your view of the southern sky, so you can only see half the entire sky. The stars all make circles that are parallel with the horizon, so they never rise nor set. It doesn’t matter what time of night you go out; you see the same stars, just in different positions in the sky. You’ll never see Alpha Centauri or the Southern Cross.

The same is true if you were to stand on the south pole, except this time you can only see the southern sky. The Earth would forever block your view of the Big Dipper, Polaris, and other exclusively northern sights.

Things change if you’re on the Equator. Facing north, you would just see Polaris on the horizon — and actually it would be a bit above the horizon, due to, of all things, our atmosphere. The air of the Earth acts like a lens, bending the path of the light from stars near the horizon. Because of this, Polaris would actually be about two degrees (about 4 times the size of the full Moon) above the horizon. If the Earth had no atmosphere, Polaris would be exactly on the horizon as seen from the Equator.

Turning round and facing south, you’d see the south pole of the sky (marked by the much fainter star Sigma Octans), which would likewise be on the horizon. Facing east, you’d see stars just now rising, and facing west those that are just now setting. If we had no Sun, over the course of 12 hours you’d see every single star in the sky as the Earth rotates beneath you. That’s because any star just setting in the west as you start your observation will be just rising in the east 12 hours later.

However, we do have the Sun (yay!) and so you can’t observe for 12 straight hours, only realistically about 10. So you don’t see the whole sky over the course of the night, you can only see about 10/12 = 5/6 = 80%. If you can push the observing for another half hour you can get up to about 87% of the sky. [Update: Stéphane corrected my math here, and he's right. My apologies for any confusion!] Astronomers divide the sky up into 24 hours — in this case, each "hour" is the distance a star on the Equator of the sky will travel in that time. It’s equivalent to 15 degrees (360 degrees / 24 hours = 15 degrees per hour). The part of the sky not seen in a picture like the one above is shaped like a watermelon slice, with the narrow points at each pole and the widest part at the Equator, near the Sun’s position. It’s one hour wide on each side of the Sun, so altogether that slice is two hours wide. That means the picture has the entire sky (24 hours) minus those two hours, for a total of 22 hours. The amount of sky seen is therefore 22/24 = 11/12 = 92%.

Plus, the Earth’s air give you a bonus: because it bends the light of stars low to the horizon, you can actually see stars that are below your physical horizon! In a sense, the air is acting like a periscope, allowing you see around a corner.

So all this together means that Guisard’s remarkable all-night photo from the Earth’s Equator shows over 90% of the entire sky that is possible to see from the ground.

Amazing.

2) So what’s the deal with this picture, anyway?

He used a fish-eye, a wide angle lens, to capture the entire 360° view of the sky. That’s why star trails near the poles are distorted. The bright trails near the southern pole are from Crux, the Southern Cross. You can also see a bright meteor that blazed its way near the pole, too.

Other stars are identifiable if you know your way around — though without labels they’re hard to find and even harder to describe. Let me try a few (though no promises on my accuracy!):

The reddish-orange streak to the right of center and extending almost the whole picture vertically is from Arcturus. I suspect the red streak just to its left that only extends a third of the way up from the photo’s bottom is Mars. I think the whitish streak to the upper right is Capella, and the bright blue one just to the right of that is Vega.

Interestingly, Orion straddles the Equator, so the three stars marking the belt would all blur together in a picture like this. Plus, this picture was taken when Orion was near the Sun, so it’s only seen briefly in this picture, making a short trail: orange-hued Betelgeuse is the very short streak at the bottom of the image, just to the right of center. I suspect the bright streak at the very top is Sirius, the brightest star in the night sky, and the bright streak near the bottom just to the left of center is Fomalhaut. The famous star Alpha Centauri is the long yellow streak to the left of center starting at the top of the image. Where that streak ends, at about the center of the picture, you can see an orange streak continuing just to its left; that’s Beta Centauri.

I’ll leave the rest to you to discover. And I’ll note that I spent some time a couple of years ago in the Galapagos, at pretty much the exact same latitude this picture was taken. The southern skies are breathtaking, and seeing Alpha Centauri for the first time was incredible. I hope sometime to repeat the experience. And if I do, I may just try to get some star trail pictures for myself.

Picture courtesy Stéphane Guisard, who actually alerted me to it.


P.S. The title of this post is a pun on the title of a classic science fiction story by one of my favorite authors of all time. And that’s all I’ll say about that.