
Nut deficiency
What would happen if you removed most of the nuts from the bolts on three of the four sides of a tall electrical power pylon? New data speaks to that question.
Newshub on 24 June that a pylon had fallen in Glorit, on New Zealand鈥檚 North Island, after a 鈥渕aintenance crew鈥 removed some nuts from bolts connecting the tower to a base plate.
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In the news video, Alison Andrew, chief executive of the Transpower company, reads aloud a presumably carefully worded statement: 鈥淥ur view is that the specifications and procedures for this type of work were not followed. All the nuts securing the tower to the base plate on three legs had been removed, which caused the tower to lift off the base plate and fall. It is unprecedented and inconceivable that so many nuts were removed at once.鈥
The consequence of the Glorit nuts removal might have been, but apparently was not, predicted by applying textbook engineering principles.
Hold on to your hats
The 鈥減oor availability in Ireland of hats鈥 鈥 a phrase featured in a paper in the journal Clinical and Experimental Dermatology 鈥 refers not to all hats, just to some hats, specifically to sun hats.
Marion Leahy and her colleagues at University Hospital Galway stuck that phrase into the of their 2022 study about the perilous state of men鈥檚 heads, especially older men鈥檚 heads, in the west of Ireland.
They warn that men there are demographically at high risk of melanoma, that these men traditionally protect themselves with hats, but that 鈥渕ost hats available to the male population in Ireland [do] not offer adequate photoprotection鈥.
Properly chosen and properly worn, a hat protects a head from the relentless assault of the sun. In 1992, B. L. Diffey and J. Cheeseman wrote a paean to the goodness of good sun hats and the badness of bad sun hats. Published in the British Journal of Dermatology, Diffey and Cheeseman鈥檚 paper, titled 鈥溾, is famous for 鈥 or should be famous for 鈥 its main photograph. To cap off your appreciation, track down a copy online.
This portrait of scientific equipment jars with the stereotypical array-of-test-tubes imagery that has, for decades, been inculcated into the minds of children. It shows, at a rakish angle, six plastic, bodyless, hairless artificial heads. They are outdoors, mounted at intervals along a rod 2.4 metres in length. Hats sit on five of the six. Nothing sits on the third head. Each head sports little squares of sunlight-degradable polysulphone film that are affixed with Blu Tack onto the forehead, nose, cheeks, chin and neck.
A second, less avant-garde photo shows 鈥渢he 28 hats worn in the study鈥, arranged in four rows of seven hats or hatlike objects. The styles range considerably, and include a crownless green plastic visor, an 鈥渁irline pilot peaked cap鈥, a 鈥渃hecked deerstalker cap鈥 and a 鈥淩ussian fur hat鈥.
Much of this is dermatological madhattery, Diffey and Cheeseman lead us to believe, on display under the blazing sun.
Spacey superpowers
Bruce Stavert sends a reminder to Feedback鈥檚 growing collection of trivial superpowers that talent by itself doesn鈥檛 guarantee success.
He says: 鈥淚 thought I鈥檇 contribute to the discussion on spacey superpowers. My superpower sense of north becomes a superhindrance in the northern hemisphere, where I constantly find myself driving or walking in the opposite of my intended direction.
鈥淐learly the position of the sun plays a large role in these superpowers. I have to stop and think 鈥榯he sun is in the south here鈥 before making any directional decisions. I was in the US at a conference dinner once and was telling an American participant about this problem. 鈥楧oes it still rise in the east?鈥 he asked. Mind you, he also found it hard to believe that it was winter in Australia while we were enduring a terribly hot Boston summer.鈥
The Ghod Dam limit
Bapu Deokar and colleagues lay out some Ghod Dam water bookkeeping basics in a paper in the Asian Journal of Environment and Ecology, 鈥溾. They explain that as the water level behind the dam plummets, the region鈥檚 car wash businesses respond by sucking up increased amounts of groundwater. 鈥淎s a result,鈥 the study warns, 鈥渢he groundwater level is decreasing, leading to a shortage in the volume of groundwater.鈥
Feedback boned up on some Ghod Dam basics by digging up a copy of a should-be-beloved-because-of-its-title study called 鈥淰olcanic vents of the Ghod Dam area鈥, published in 1997 in the Journal of the University of Poona. It confirms that the Ghod Dam is 鈥渘ear Chinchni, in the district of Poona, in India鈥.
Recently, in the , Hanumant Dattatray Shinde of Shri Padmamani Jain Arts and Commerce College calculated that, over the course of a year, 鈥渦p to 1.56 TMC [thousand million cubic metres]鈥 of water evaporates from the Ghod Dam. No matter how you describe it 鈥 鈥淕hod Dam鈥 or just 鈥渄am鈥 鈥 the structure passes a lot of water.
Marc Abrahams created the Ig Nobel Prize ceremony and聽co-founded聽the magazine Annals of Improbable Research. Earlier, he worked on unusual ways to use computers. His website is聽.
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