Bora's Picks (December 28th, 2012)

Scientific American - Energy & Sustainability 2012-12-28

Summary:

What does randomness look like? by Aatish Bhatia : On 13 June 1944, a week after the allied invasion of Normandy, a loud buzzing sound rattled through the skies of battle-worn London. The source of the sound was a newly developed German instrument of war, the V-1 flying bomb. A precursor to the cruise missile, the V-1 was a self-propelled flying bomb, guided using gyroscopes, and powered by a simple pulse jet engine that gulped air and ignited fuel 50 times a second. This high frequency pulsing gave the bomb its characteristic sound, earning them the nickname buzzbombs..... [More] Add to digg Add to StumbleUpon Add to Reddit Add to Facebook Add to del.icio.us Email this Article

Link:

http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=5c0f6fe8c21b62ed8ea0a2027b008b4f

From feeds:

Berkeley Law Library -- Reference & Research Services ยป Scientific American - Energy & Sustainability

Tags:

energy & sustainabilitymind & brainspacemore scienceevolutionhealthtechnology

Date tagged:

12/28/2012, 12:37

Date published:

12/28/2012, 10:05