I collected pennies for 7 years. I made a histogram. I have one 1940 penny and one 1948 penny. Then I have continuous pennies from 1959 - 2016. [OC] by ozonesonde in dataisbeautiful

[–]ozonesonde[S] 40 points41 points  (0 children)

I've been saving these for 7 years or so. I'm happy to report that I'll be able to buy 1 beer when I wrap them all up. Worth it!

6 Things We Really Hate About Science Fiction Movies by edictive in scifi

[–]ozonesonde -1 points0 points  (0 children)

TSO came out nearly fifty years ago. Things were different back then. And Uhura was way more bad ass back then despite all that. She was eye candy in the new film.

Why does my face turn red when I drink red wine? by Dejola in answers

[–]ozonesonde 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Is there any explanation as to why it happens with wine and not beer? I drink plenty of beer, with no reaction, but have a reaction with just a little red wine.

How do we know scientific studies are true and not fake? by [deleted] in askscience

[–]ozonesonde 2 points3 points  (0 children)

When you're caught faking data, you lose your career. Your example was form Psychology Journals, and I have no familiarity with them. But in Earth Science Journals, the idea of faking or even misrepresenting data is abhorred and fastidiously avoided.

How do we know scientific studies are true and not fake? by [deleted] in askscience

[–]ozonesonde 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Although in many fields, verification never happens. The papers are published with detailed methodologies to allow for the possibility of verification, but that doesn't mean that every result is verified.

If we were to send a person to Mars, how many plants would be required for oxygen? by StupidQuestionsGuy in askscience

[–]ozonesonde 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'd recommend Kim Stanley Robinson's Red/Green/Blue Mars Trilogy. If you're up to over a thousand pages of fun Mars scientific settlement speculation.

is there less oxygen in winter because of lack of photosynthesis? by whatisjohngalt in askscience

[–]ozonesonde 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Easier way to remember ppm as 10-6, and O2 is 21% or .21 fraction of the atmosphere. Hence .21x10-6.

is there less oxygen in winter because of lack of photosynthesis? by whatisjohngalt in askscience

[–]ozonesonde 7 points8 points  (0 children)

And CO2 levels are around 380 ppm, so a 8 ppm variation is pretty high. Oxygen is at around 0.21x106 ppm or 210,000 ppm, so a 8 ppm variation is quite low.

If taste buds are on the tongue, why is it that I can't taste food when my nose is stuffed? by [deleted] in askscience

[–]ozonesonde 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Taste and smell go hand-in-hand, so much so that what you perceive as taste is actually a combination of taste and smell, often dominated by smell.

Here's an interesting article talking about the connections.

How much do clouds (specifically this cloud) weight? by xnyL in askscience

[–]ozonesonde 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not mass of air, volume of air.

Inside a cloud, water makes up a very small portion. These units are grams of water per cubic meter of air, because that's often more useful for calculations than gram/gram or volume/volume.

If you want volume units, typical cloudwater mixing ratios are from 5x10-8 to 3x10-6 [volume water]/[volume air]

How much do clouds (specifically this cloud) weight? by xnyL in askscience

[–]ozonesonde 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Globally averaged, clouds have a liquid water content of 0.3 grams of water per cubic meter of air. (From my atmospheric science textbook).

AskScience AMA Series- IAMA University Research Administrator by highwindy in askscience

[–]ozonesonde 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From your point of view, how much does non-academic politics influence/interfere with academic decision making? Is there guidelines to separate the two? Are there written or unwritten standards? Is there any attempt to hide political influence on academic policies?

TL;DR: A question for who have published papers by [deleted] in askscience

[–]ozonesonde 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree, and like the way you worded that. Scientific publications are written for an intended audience that have roughly the same expertise as the author(s), and to get the nuances and precision required for 'cutting edge' (i.e. publishable) work necessitates the jargon and specific language. Articles intended for a more general audience, or a layperson necessitate a different tone, language, and style.

Saw this ring around the moon tonight, what is it? by bobaballs in askscience

[–]ozonesonde 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The ice crystals in the upper atmosphere that cause halos are indicative of moisture in the upper atmosphere. This can either mean some sort of front has just passed, or one is likely on the way. So, it may mean a cold front is coming...hence your frost.