Monday, June 15, 2009

Grand Canyon prelude

About a month ago I hiked 28 miles in the Grand Canyon with two friends from Cornell. I've promised people to do a full blog on the whole experience, but as usual, am having difficulty actually doing it. In the mean time here are some panoramas I just stitched together.

This was taken from the Hermit Trail on our first day:



This is the view from the Tonto Trail near the junction with Bright Angel Trail:



More later.

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

338

As of 1 a.m. EST President-elect Barack Hussein Obama and and Vice President elect Joe Biden have 338 of 538 electoral votes; more than twice what John McCain and Sarah Palin have. Way more than the 270 needed to win in the electoral college. Five states remain but are too close to call. Iowa went for Obama at %54; New York at %62. (I voted in NY.)

Barack Obama will be the 44th president of the USA. Michelle Obama will be the next First Lady. The news was broken to me by John Stewart.

This is more than I ever hoped for.

My fellow Americans and I just elected the first African-American to the be President of the United States of America; a man whose middle name is Hussein.

It's been a long journey (especially for those of us who are from Iowa), and the it's hard to believe it's over/just started.

What else can I say....

Yes we can!

AND DID!!!

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Planetary concert

Last Saturday the Cornell Symphony Orchestra and Ithaca College Symphony Orchestra joined forces to perform a new piece named "Anillos" and Holst's "The Planets".
The occasion was the American Astronomical Society Division of Planetary Scientists concert. Since May I've been working with an astronomy professor and several grad students and post docs in my department to put together videos of images and animations to play along with the music. I posted a link to the two videos I made in an earlier post but here it is again. (I recommend the smallest versions for web viewing.)
First let me say a little about "Anillos". It's a piece written by Roberto Sierra, a Cornell music professor, and was inspired by images from the Cassini spacecraft. We premiered it what I call the "DPS concert".

The concert and new work received a lot of press around town, as well as the other public events associated with the conference. Here's an article from the Cornell Chronicle.

The concert was a huge success. The orchestras played well. Dynamically playing the videos in real time went off without any problems. And not only did we sell out the hall, which seats about 1300, there was a line of hundreds of people trying to get into the concert. Needless to say, I was thrilled. We even made it in a blog for the scientific journal Nature.

It's so exciting to see something that I worked so hard on come off as such a success.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Bluring reality

For the last couple weeks I've been making my way through season 7 of West Wing, and often been amused at the parallels between the election on the show and the current presidential election. So when I read this editorial in the NYTimes, I smiled a little inside:

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/21/opinion/21dowd-sorkin.html?em

Oh and while I'm at it:

Truthiness Stages a Comeback

Saturday, September 13, 2008

A little of everything

So a lot has happened in the last 6 weeks through the world and in American politics and relatively little has happened in my little sphere of the world.
But I'll start with me since it's easier. The semester has started up again, and I've decided not to take any classes in order to focus my attention on research. It still blows me away that inside of three months I've gone from having a project which is largely hypothetical to having a laundry list of things to do. And I'm happy to be able to write that I really enjoy what I'm working on. Although I do miss Berkeley a bit, more the people I worked with than the city itself, it's good to be back in Ithaca.
Last weekend I went backpacking in southern PA on the Laurel Highlands Ridge Trail with Marcy and Shane and sprained my ankle on what was going to be mile 4 of 25 over two days. Me being somewhat stubborn when it comes to turning back on trails, popped some ibuprofen and pressed on (with my fellow hikers carrying most of my stuff). In retrospect not the best idea. In part because having the extra load tired M&S out quickly, and I rolled my ankle a second time close to the shelters. After 14 long miles we made it to the shelters on the last light from sunset. The strong north wind blew right into our lean-to (I hate wind), Shane got sick from tainted well water, and I knew there was no way I could hike the 11 miles to the car the next day. So I fell asleep dreading the thought of having to spend 7 or so hours alone with nothing to do in a windy shelter while I waited for the others to get the car and pick me up followed by a 6 hour drive back to Ithaca, mostly in the dark.
And then we awoke to a beautiful sunny day and view through the trees of the valley and parallel ridges. Two local guys came to our rescue and drove the three of us back to Marcy and Shane's car. They have no idea how much the ride helped us out. We finished the trip by having a huge breakfast in Ruthie's, the local diner. I love local diners by the way, and this was a good one. Next time I'm going to let them plan the trip. My ankle is still recovering but the swelling is going down.
So the side project which is consuming a lot of time is an interesting confluence of astronomy and music. In October the Division of Planetary Science is holding a meeting in Ithaca, and as part of the convention, the Cornell Symphony is going to play Holst's "The Planets" as well as a new piece being written for the conference. We also decided to put together a movie of images and videos that will be shown while the orchestra is playing. I'm in charge of organizing the grad students and post docs to put the movies together. I've really enjoyed it, but it's also been time consuming. I have the movies I made (for Mercury and Jupiter) on my astro website if you're interested in checking them out:

www.astro.cornell.edu/~lspitler

So....the world. There was the Olympics. And the whole Georgia thing. Don't have much to say there. Let's move on to politics shall we?
The major political news has been conventions and naming of VP's. Biden, ok, no problem. Palin.....WTF!?!?
In short, Palin frustrates and terrifies me. I feel this way anytime some evangelical bible-thumper has too much power. The frustration arises around the social issues mainly. Same-sex marriage, pro-life (anti-choice or anti-freedom if you'd like the me to spin it in language that conservatives can understand), abstinence-only education and all those other "values" (I really dislike that term). But my frustration level is elevated even higher in light of her daughter. (Yes, I'm going down that road. I think the situation, but not the individual is fair game.) First off, all I have to say is "Thank God for abstinence only education", because clearly it's working wonders on teenagers. Here's what gets me. All of the social conservative, "values voters" are so pleased that her daugher is *choosing* to do the right thing, have the baby and marrying the father. Great. Who wants to be that three years down the line they're not still married? So much for family values.
But here's the thing that really gets me. A decade from now, Sarah Palin will still be marching on the crusade against teaching anything but the utter absurdity that is abstinence-only sex education even after seeing how becoming a mother at 17 has hindered her daughter's potential in life.
Now on the the reasons I'm terrified. Basically she's grossly under-qualified. But I'm not going to go into that. There are plenty of people more well-versed in this that can articulate the reasons better than I.
There is one thing in particular I do want to address, and that's the ramifications of a president who doesn't believe in evolution. This is a disaster for American scientific achievement, and the ability for us to stay at the forefront of scientific and technological development. I'm sorry, but the economy is not driven by bible-thumping. As someone who is training to become a scientist by trade, this has real ramifications for me. Astronomy in this country is largely funded by the National Science Foundation. The NSF's budget is set in the Federal Budget. Having an anti-science president in office for another four (eight?!) years is very, very bad for my future.
Now I will conclude on a few exciting things I discovered today. One is iTunes finally have all of Apocalyptica's albums online, so I could finally get the most recent one. I also downloaded a couple exciting applications to my iPod touch. The most exciting of which is an ssh terminal. sshing into my workstation from my iPod blew my mind.

Monday, August 18, 2008

Long six weeks

So it's been quite a month and a half. I rode three days of RAGBRAI, hiked 20 miles in Point Rayes National Seashore, worked my tail off, attended a workshop, went to the ATA and moved back to Ithaca.
RAGBRAI turned out to be a huge amount of fun. I mean where else would hear "banana on the left" and then have a guy in a banana costume pass by you.
Here are some photos:

Beach in Point Reyes complete with horses. I've never been in a park with so many horses:



On to RAGBRAI...

Waiting for pancakes outside the Nevada Fire Department on our first morning.



Cyclists



Breakfast in Vinning. Breakfast was the best part of the day, and Vinning won our vote for best breakfast of the ride.



Me on the campus of Cornell College in Mt. Vernon.



There's more. But I'll post these photos for now.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Disappointing final

Today was the final game of the Euro Cup 2008...Spain vs Germany. As you could probably surmise from my title, Germany lost. To be honest, they didn't deserve to win given how they played.
It also turned out to be gay pride weekend in San Francisco, and given that it's San Francisco, is quite the party. I wasn't really in a partying mood and didn't stick around.
I was also going to impress you all with a quote from Mark Twain: "The coldest winter I ever experienced was summer in San Francisco." Well it turns out that he never actually said it, but it's a good quote none the less. In fact summer here is absurdly cold. I'm happy if I can sit outside comfortably without a jacket. Actually I'm happy if I can sit inside without a jacket.
Work's going well. I fly back to Iowa in three weeks.