
Category Archives: Science
Transit of Venus


Wayback on June 5, 2012, I observed the last to occur transit of Venus, an astronomical event where Venus passes between the Earth and the Sun. It happened on a Tuesday, but not until after five, so I was already home from work. I had time to setup a telescope on the sidewalk and project the above image onto a piece of paper. Holding the paper in one hand, I snapped the photo with my other. Due of the planetary geometry this event was much easier to see than a total eclipse of the Moon. Because to the relative tilts of the orbits of Earth and Venus, these events occur in pairs, eight years apart, about once a century. Sometime later, we attended a U-City quilt show, where the pictured quilt was on display. It more dynamically captures this event than I was able to.
Smelling the Bouquet


In addition to displaying a myriad of flowers, the Missouri Botanical Gardens is also a world class research center. This fact is currently on display in the Sachs Museum, with the exhibit Smelling the Bouquet. The highlight of this exhibition is the opportunity to sniff over two dozen scents that include several interpretive fragrances of the garden’s live plants as well as botanical compounds renowned for use in perfumery. Small bell jars are laid out throughout the museum and visitors are invited to pick them up and smell. Most of the scents are pleasant, but a few like the aptly named corpse flower don’t just smell, they stink.
Scent is an essential part of life. It is especially important to plants, as they use the chemistry of scent to communicate with the world around them, attracting pollinators with their intoxicating smells and repelling herbivores with pungent odors. These different scents attract and repel humans as well, evidenced by the archaeological remains of plants and tools used for incense and perfume in ancient cultures. Every part of a plant—from flower to root—contains volatile organic compounds (VOC) that can be harvested and extracted through different processes, with the art and science of perfumery combining these elements in new and exciting compositions for one’s nose to enjoy.
Smelling the Bouquet explores the spectrum of scents plants create, inspired by the diverse live and scientific collections at the garden. The gardens outdoors offer renowned fragrant plants that have been a part of human culture for millennia, such as roses, jasmine, and water lilies. The garden’s conservatories protect and display unique and rare plants from around the globe that provide new opportunities for botanists and horticulturists to study and analyze their scents to understand pollinator interactions and what VOCs they may create and emit. Garden botanists carry out this scent research on plants in Madagascar, which is today also the center of production for one of the most famous and identifiable scents in the world, Madagascar vanilla. The garden’s Herbarium specimens, together with scent-related objects, intersect the artistry and the botany behind the human culture of scent.
I look at clouds from both sides now

Clouds develop when moist air cools to its dew point by rising to a higher altitude or by moving over a cooler surface. Water vapor in the air then condenses in liquid or frozen form around minute particles such as pollen or dust. The shapes and altitudes of clouds, as well as the sequences in which they develop, help people forecast the weather. In the early 19th century, Englishman Luke Howard-chemist by trade and meteorologist by avocation-created a system for classifying clouds using Latin names. He described the three most common shapes as cirrus (curl of hair), stratus (layer), and cumulus (heap); he also defined four compound cloud forms that derive from the three primary shapes, including nimbus (rain). Later scientists added terms such as humilis (small) and incus (anvil) to designate other cloud properties. The International Cloud-Atlas, first published in 1896, is based on this classification system. Nine of the ten basic cloud genera are pictured on this stamp pane and arranged according to altitude. The prefixes “cirro” and “alto” distinguish high- and middle-altitude clouds, respectively.
- Composed of windblown ice crystals, cirrus are fibrous, often wispy clouds that appear in isolated patches or cover large areas of the sky. Cirrus radiatus appear to emerge from the horizon in parallel bands.
- Relatively transparent cirrostratus fibratus clouds occur mostly in winter and often produce a halo effect around the sun or moon. Thickening cirrostratus frequently indicate the approach of a frontal system.
- Cirrocumulus undulatus are patches or layers of small puffy clouds arranged in patterns. They have a rippled appearance due to wind shear and usually cover only a small portion of the sky.
- Pouch-like cumulonimbus mammatus develop when pockets of air chilled by evaporating droplets or ice crystals sink into dry surroundings under the anvil. They usually indicate the approach or departure of a potentially severe thunderstorm.
- Cumulonimbus incus, or thunderstorm clouds, form when rapid updrafts within cumulus congestus clouds rise into the upper atmosphere and spread out into mushroom-shaped anvils. Thunderstorms always produce lightning; severe storms may produce heavy rain, large portion of the sky.
- Small heaps arranged in layers or sheets, altocumulus stratiformis clouds are primarily composed of water droplets and as depicted here, reflect glorious colors at sunset. If they become thicker during the day, a storm may be approaching.
- Altostratus translucidus, cloud sheets formed by the rising and cooling of large air masses, often precede advancing storm systems. A “watery” sun (or moon) may shine dimly through the thinner sections of the cloud sheet.
- Resembling ripples on water, altocumulus undulatus clouds result from wind shear-wind speed or direction that changes sharply with height. They may appear as patches or cover the sky.
- Named for the turret-like protuberances in their top portions, altocumulus castellanus clouds signify unstable air in the vicinity and often indicate the potential for thunderstorms later in the day.
- Smooth, almost motionless altocumulus lenticularis clouds resemble lenses and may be iridescent. They often look like UFOs and form in the crests of waves that occur when strong winds cross over a mountain peak.
- Stratocumulus undulatus occur when weak updrafts spread horizontally, creating a layer of shallow, puffy clouds that is blown by strong winds into wave-like formations that lie at right angles to the wind. These clouds seldom produce precipitation.
- Gray, featureless cloud layers that can spread over hundreds of square miles, stratus opacus, like stratocumulus, are generally composed of water droplets. Stratus clouds occasionally produce drizzle or light snow.
- Cumulus humilis-the smallest of the cumulus clouds-have flat bases and rounded tops. Usually wider than they are tall, these fair-weather clouds very rarely produce precipitation and often evaporate as the sun sets.
- Strong, buoyant updrafts of warm, moist air in an unstable atmosphere cause cumulus clouds to develop into cumulus congestus. These towering clouds can produce moderate rain or snow showers and may grow into cumulonimbus clouds.
- Among nature’s most destructive phenomena, tornadoes are rapidly spinning columns of rising air extending between the base of a cumulonimbus cloud and the ground. In extreme cases, tornado winds may exceed 250 miles an hour.
Edwin Powell Hubble Stamps

The Hubble Space Telescope, launched in April 1990, was named by NASA in honor of astronomer Dr. Edwin Powell Hubble (1889-1953). Hubble determined that galaxies (very large groups of stars and associated matter) exist outside of and are receding from the Milky Way. His work demonstrated that the universe is expanding. The Hubble Space Telescope has taken hundreds of thousands of images of astronomical objects, including the four nebulae (interstellar clouds of gas and dust) and one galaxy shown on these stamps.
- Eagle Nebula – NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope captured the beauty of a dramatic region of star formation This stellar nursery, known as the Eagle Nebula, features pillars of dust and gas that act as cocoons for young stars.
- Ring Nebula – The Hubble Space Telescope peered at the Ring Nebula, a barrel of gas cast off by a dying star similar to our sun. The barrel, formed over thousands of years at the end of the star’s life, appears as a ring
- Lagoon Nebula – Hubble imaged an eerie cradle of star formation called the Lagoon Nebula. The giant clouds of dusty gas may have been shaped by high-speed interstellar winds created in the clouds by new stars.
- Egg Nebula – Hubble provided this view of the last gasps of the sun-like star in the Egg Nebula. The intriguing “searchlight” beams are emerging from the dying star, hidden behind the dark central dust band.
- Galaxy NGC 1316 – Hubble captured the aftermath of an ancient collision between two galaxies. The remains of the small galaxy appear as dark clumps against the glowing core of the large galaxy, known as NGC 1316.
When my father was a boy, he used to collect stamps. I remember finding his childhood stamp albums, one domestic and the other foreign. The foreign album I always found the most fascinating of the two. Each country had its own page(s). He collected stamps in the 1930s, so Germany’s stamps were all full of swastikas and because of its inflation at that time there were a lot of them. I guess it took a lot more of their stamps to mail a letter than most other countries did. My brother “inherited” those collections. This summer, while sifting through my dad’s stuff, I discovered that he had renewed his love of philately. Aided by the postal service’s desire for revenue by selling more stamps, he had collected quite a few commemorative sheets of stamps. These one-sheet collections are too pretty to use for postage, so I guess that I will just keep them.
