
Feedback is our weekly column of bizarre stories, implausible advertising claims, confusing instructions and more
Going down the tubes
DELIGHTFUL nonsense ā that was Henry Shipleyās verdict on the conspiracy concept that orchestras tune the note A to 440 hertz because of a Nazi plot (18 January). He observes that the subject could introduce a strange unit: the foot as a unit of pitch. Or not so strange: the speed of sound in air means that the note middle C is produced by an organ pipe about 2 feet (0.6 metres) long, while a 1-foot pipe produces the C an octave above this.
And in this connection, David Fletcher points to an as yet under-appreciated consequence of carbon dioxide emissions: global flattening. Back in 1998, he wrote that calculations published in the Journal of Theoretical and Applied Acoustics ā which we have not tracked down ā dealt with the increase in density of air with CO2 concentration. These revealed, he reported at the time and at , that the pitch of a baroque instrument which today is A = 415 Hz would at the time of construction actually have been A = 438 Hz.
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The BBC in January of āfinding a way to do 3D surgery on the brainā ā as opposed to how many dimensions, Dave Goodwin wants to know
Do humans cause the climate?
AUSTRALIAāS Abbott government has, unfortunately, made it crystal clear to the rest of the world where it stands on climate change. Lindsey Slights was still shocked by comments from environment minister Greg Hunt on the cost of rescuing passengers from the Russian research vessel the Akademik Shokalskiy, stranded in the Antarctic in January.
He described the affair as āa reminder that everyone operating in the Southern Ocean ā be they whalers, protesters, climate believers or those of a different view ā has to put safety ahead of everything elseā. As Lindsey says: āto have the Environment Minister suggest that the climate itself may or may not actually exist is really taking it a step too farā.
Acrostic topology
WHEN we asked whether readers knew any other examples of acrostics in science, we should have known that it would be a mathematician who came up with something more elegant than the undergraduate physics essay featuring a Rick Astley song in the first letter of each line (8 February).
Peter Johnstone sends a paper published in 1981, in which he answered the question of whether a mathematical structure introduced by Dana Scott a decade earlier, known as the Scott topology, had the property called āsobrietyā ā which Feedback does not pretend to understand (). It was natural, then, that this short paper be titled āScott is not always soberā; and the initial letters of the sentences spelled: āIām not being personal Dana.ā
Peter recalls that the publisherās lawyers insisted that these letters and the word āacrosticā be in bold type, afeared that Dana Scott would sue ā āthough he had already seen, and been heartily amused by, the articleā.
The late John Isbell subsequently ācompletedā Peterās paper āby giving an example of a complete lattice whose Scott topology fails to be soberā. He circulated an abstract entitled āJohnstone is not all thereā, the initial letters of the sentences spelling out peccavi ā Latin for āI have sinnedā. Unfortunately, the editors were having none of that in the .
Designate driver direction
RESPONDING to highly publicised and disastrous crashes involving cars proceeding in the wrong direction on high-speed highways, New York State is installing radar systems to spot such wrong-way drivers. These systems will warn drivers with illuminated signs ā and by sending text alerts to their cellphones.
This initiative was announced by the same state governor, Andrew Cuomo, who has pushed for laws preventing drivers from texting. CBS News reports at that āthe new system doesnāt allow drivers to violate the no-texting lawsā.
Feedback is still trying to work out how this works. We dismiss the idea that people who drive the wrong way would obey a legal requirement that they bring a passenger to read the text to them. And who would volunteer to be that passenger?
Better when weāre in power
FEEDBACK, Mike Green says, āappears to have completely misunderstood a simple difference between schools āgetting better all the timeā and āgrade inflationā ā. We were considering UK Education Secretary Michael Goveās explanation that all schools could be above average if they were āgetting better all the timeā and admitted this was technically possible, only if test scores rose continuously (1 February).
āGetting better all the timeā, Mike observes, āis what happens when my party is in government; āgrade inflationā when itās yours.ā
Gove me the word
FINALLY, Feedback harbours a suspicion that Michael Gove did not necessarily intend the logical sense of āgetting better all the timeā, the distinction of which from āgrade inflationā we discuss above. We remind him of the words of John Lennon and Paul McCartney, which continue: āI used to get mad at my school / The teachers who taught me werenāt cool / Youāre holding me down / Turning me round / Filling me up with your rules.ā
None of this is, we believe, in complete accordance with stated government policy.