Saturday, September 22, 2012

SHADOW METHOD

I am now working on a children's show about the science of smell and so I've been doing a good amount of research on historical theories of olfaction. One of the famous monographs on smell is John E. Amoore's Molecular Basis Of Odor in which he uses space filling molecular models (non-computer generated physical models, this was 1970) to try to find correlations between the gross molecular shape of odorant molecules and overarching classes of "primary odors". Amoore is best known for making generalizations like: camphoraceous smells are molecularly "bowl-like" and accepted by a "bowl-like" receptor, musky smells are molecularly "petrie-like" and accepted by a "petrie-like" receptor, floral smells are molecularly "key-like", and so on.

The book is worth skimming even if many of its hypotheses are disproven or based on dated concepts of the senses but one thing I found particularly interesting is the way that some of the odorant molecules are illustrated using a combination of space filling models in silhouette and skeletal notation. Amoore used this as part of what he called the "shadow-matching method." I had never seen this before and was surprised because it is actually a great way to combine the best features of both modes of representation. Spacial dimensions are indicated without looking like a confusing, botryoidal jumble of spheres and all of the readability of skeletal notation is left intact. Obviously this can present some problems, especially for non-planar molecules, which are sometimes forced into a planar conformation for skeletal diagrams but still it's interesting you don't see it more often in textbooks. I know programs like pymol can do similar, more complex versions of this where the 3D Van Der Waals surface envelopes a 3D ball and stick model but what about just a simple representation like the below, are there any programs that do (a clear better aligned version of) that?


Saturday, September 15, 2012

THE WEIRD SCIENCE ISSUE IS OUT

The weird science issue is now printed and available in select locations. The articles are being incrementally uploaded to vice.com accompanied by a few articles I had nothing to do with (e.g. something about "bath salts" that I did not see until the day before the issue went to press). Certain articles are online in an expanded version (e.g. there will be two additional pages of Alexander Shulgin's lab notebook at vice.com and in European editions of the magazine) other things are only featured in the print editions (e.g. two unpublished photos by Carsten Höller). Stanislaw Lem's short story A Puzzle and my guest-editor letter are now available online, enjoy!

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

SEPTEMBER: THE WEIRD SCIENCE ISSUE

















 A short story by Stanislaw Lem translated into the English for the first time
⌬ Unpublished pages from the laboratory notebook of Alexander Shulgin featuring the details of his first psychedelic synthesis
 A new short Story by David Ohle, author of Motorman
⌬ Unpublished pages from Timothy Leary's lost prison manuscript, The Periodic Table of Energy
⌬ An interview with a clandestine 2C-C chemist
A laser etched tribute to great medicinal chemists of the 20th century.

Sunday, August 19, 2012

MANPANZEE

Life is a hideous thing, and from the background behind what we know of it peer daemoniacal hints of truth which make it sometimes a thousandfold more hideous. Science, already oppressive with its shocking revelations, will perhaps be the ultimate exterminator of our human species––if separate species we be––for its reserve of unguessed horrors could never be borne by mortal brains if loosed upon the world.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

SPACE-FILLING MODEL ILLUSTRATIONS

Does anyone know how these hatched, B&W space-filling model illustrations were generated for The chemistry of mind-altering drugs? The book was originally published in 1996 and I'm not aware of any current programs that produce these kinds of representations:

Sunday, June 24, 2012

CAN YOU IDENTIFY THIS MUZAK OR SHOWTUNE?

Doing so will aid a murder investigation. The music/muzak is playing in a diner/restaurant in 1983 either from the radio, a record, or television. The diner/restaurant was likely located in San Antonio or Castle Hills, Texas. As the recording currently stands it is not recognized by Shazam but a friend suggested running it though a program called izotope RX, which I do not have access to. Using a demo version of Sound Soap did not make the audio sufficiently clear to be recognized by Shazam. I have submitted it to reddit/r/classicalmusic without it being recognized by any users. Though one user suggested running it through a music search engine that allows you to identify pieces by tapping notes to the melody, but I don't have perfect pitch and was unable to identify the notes in the music fragments. Any help would be greatly appreciated. 

Friday, June 8, 2012

Enjoy my review of Carsten Höller's new book in The Brooklyn Rail: CARSTEN HÖLLER: Artist's Portfolio