Sunday 25 March 2012

Professor Todd and the signals from Mars

The astronomer, Professor David Peck Todd (1855-1939), will probably go down in history as the husband of Mabel Loomis Todd, the mistress of Emily Dickinson's brother and eventual editor of Emily's poetry.

He is also notable for dreaming up ambitious schemes regarding astronomy, that became increasingly eccentric as he got older, and he spent his last 17 years in a series of hospitals and nursing homes during which time he became worried that the sun would split in two, or he spent his time working on his plan for eternal life called “Vital Engineering”.

But as a man whose dreams far outweigh his capabilities, I have quite a lot of sympathy with David Todd. Not so much with the whole open marriage thing, nor with the way he kept track of his masturbating habits in his diaries. More to do with his ideas of detecting radio signals from Mars.

His plan, as reported in the New York Times, May 2, 1909, was to ascend to the highest possible altitude that a man could go in a balloon, with some radio equipment in order to hear any radio signals from Mars at a time when it was at its closest. At this time, the debate of life on Mars was still raging since, in 1905, Lowell had published his first photographs of the famous canals of Mars and then in 1907 Alfred Russell Wallace's book “Is Mars Habitable” which debunked the arguments for Martian life was released.

I can find no report about Professor Todd actually achieving his balloon flight (a book “Transmitting the Past” mentions that Todd did not achieve the desired altitude, but gives no reference for this), but it seems that the idea never left him, and he must've been encouraged in May 1910 when balloons were used to observe Halley's Comet.

In the April 15, 1920 issue of the New York Times there is a story concerning Todd's planning finally being carried out in the forthcoming week, after “five years of planning”. I can find no further mention of Todd's flight, but by now his ideas had clearly caught some people's imagination since at least one other attempt to hear signals from Mars (albeit without a balloon) was reported that year, although the debate about intelligent life on Mars had been dismissed by now in astronomical circles. Furthermore, in 1919 Marconi had suggested that some unfamiliar signals he'd received were possibly coming from another world until three years later when he discovered they were coming from the General Electric Company in Schenectady.

The attempt in 1920 by Drs Milliner and Gainer found no signals, but in 1924 another attempt recorded a “face” signal at half-hour intervals. Professor Todd, who was by now in a nursing home and had been for two years, said

“Three years ago Marconi was reported as saying he had heard signals from Mars. A few days ago he was quoted as saying he was too busy to listen to possible messages from Mars and that it was a ridiculous idea to do so. He changed his mind, and no one knows what he heard the first time. With our photograph, however, it is not a question of what one man heard. It is a permanent record, which all can study.”

However, the wavelength chosen was a frequency that would probably be blocked by the Earth's ionosphere so it can't have come from outer space and the “face” picture just looks like some dots to me.


References:

“The Vigil on the Continent,” The London Times, 20th May, 1910

“No Messages from Mars”, The London Times, 24th April, 1920

Alfred Russell Wallace, “Is Mars Habitable”, MacMillan and Co., London, 1907
http://archive.org/details/cu31924012312017

“Weird “Radio Signal” Film Deepens Mystery of Mars,” Washington Post, 27th August, 1924, from http://www.shorpy.com/node/12482

Longsworth, P., “Austin and Mabel: the Amherst affair & love letters of Austin Dickinson and Mabel Loomis Todd,” Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1984

“From Schenectady not Mars”, Literary Digest, August 5th 1922

Sunday 18 March 2012

Of Dyke Squares and Dog Holes

Reading books on subjects that you're not interested in is, in itself, pretty interesting. Recently I read two books about Draughts (or Checkers), "The Wonderful World of Checkers and Draughts" and "The Science of Checkers and Draughts" and I was surprised at the colourful jargon that has grown up around what is – at first glance – a simple game.

While I read, I came across evocative terms such as Dyke Squares ( a square which forms a line of your pieces when you move into it) and Dog Holes (a square which you cannot move out of once you've moved there).

At times, it felt more like I was reading about Poker, with the player Jules Leopold being described as "... strictly a "crossboard" player and, like the late "Sunset" Bell, enjoys playing for strokes and traps."

Add to these phrases like the "delayed steal", the "American position", "Payne's draw", having "the move", being "game up" or "man down", the "in-and-out shot" and the "big theft." I think that Draughts could be one of the more peotic board games I've come across.


References

T. Wiswell, J. Leopold, "The Wonderful World of Checkers and Draughts", 1980, A.S.Barnes and Co., Inc

T. Wiswell, "The Science of Checkers and Draughts", 1973, A.S.Barnes and Co., Inc

Tuesday 13 March 2012

Life Drawing 11/03/12

Last Sunday I went to a longer than usual life drawing session with a single four hour pose. My plan was to keep redrawing the same thing to try and force myself to keep looking at it anew each time. Was a bit of a struggle, but I have to admit that the last two were my favourites.


Wednesday 7 March 2012

Everyone gets a share of the pi

While reading about the history of mathematics in Japan I found a mathematical sequence which, for reasons I do not know, happens to contain a lot of the estimates for pi that have been put forward throughout history.

This sequence was discovered by Seki Kōwa and was published in 1712 after his death in a book called Katsuyō Sanpō. It runs as follows:

Start with the fraction 3/1. If this number is lower than pi, then increase the upper number by 4. If it is greater, then increase it by three. Then increase the lower number by one. And continue like this.


If you do this, you get a sequence of numbers that includes the estimates of pi from different people from different times in history. In this list (mostly Chinese mathematicians, since up until then Japanese maths was heavily influenced by Chinese textbooks), Kōwa finds the values from Chih (25/8 or 3.125), T'ung Ling (63/20, or 3.15), the “old Japanese” value (79/25 or 3.16), Liu Chi (142/45 or 3.155), Hui (157/50 or 3.14) and also 355/113 (which is very close to the actual value of pi at 3.14159292) but this isn't credited to anyone, so Kōwa must've known about it's use as a value of pi, but not known that Tsu Ch'ung-chih had found it.

I like mathematical sequences that seem to have a narrative, although I doubt it has any use. I don't think the series converges on the true value of pi (I haven't checked) but it does occur to me that this isn't a very good way of calculating pi, because it only works if you already know the value of pi.

Reference
D.E. Smith, Y. Makami, “A History of Japanese Mathematics”, Open Court Publishing Company, Chicago, 1914, p111-112

Thursday 1 March 2012

S.S. Ithaca

On the 3rd May 1875 a steamship, the Kynance was rammed in "thick weather" at four in the morning off St Ive's Head by an unidentified steamship. All twelve of the crew escaped on a boat, but the ship that rammed them continued on its course and didn't heed their calls for help.

Later the S.S. Ithaca was identified as the ship in question and it was impounded at Bristol.

Pity about the white blob covering the text.
And although this story calls the sunken steamer "Hynance",
every other source calls it "Kynance"

But oddly enough, another ship was rammed and sank on the 3rd May in that area by an unidentified steamship. The Talbot (a schooner) was hit off Trevose Head and it's crew were later picked up by The Flying Cloud and taken to Padston.

I did a bit of searching and found that the S.S. Ithaca was in Falmouth on the 2nd May, so to get to Bristol it would have gone past those two locations, in that order. It seems quite a coincidence that there were two different unidentified steamers running into ships that day (though not impossible: I've read that in the mid 1800s you could see three hundred ships from the island of Lundy). The closeness of location and time certainly makes me suspect it was the same ship.

Maybe it was captained by a particularly ruthless sailor who considered it everybody else's job to get out of his way, or maybe it was an ineffectual, slightly comical captain who was just having one of those days.


References

The Daily News (London), Monday 10th May 1875


Royal Cornwall Gazette, Saturday 15th May 1875


Richard Larn, Bridget Larn, "Shipwreck Index of the British Isles, volume 1, The West Country", Lloyd's Register of Shipping. 1995