Saturday, November 27, 2010

Nature Makes No Leaps



Natura non facit saltus
--Nature makes no leaps

The other day I was admiring one of those powerful spotlights that shines into the heavens at grand openings and such. What I pondered was how fast the beam can move about the sky-seemingly at hundreds of miles per second as it arcs across a cloud-covered sky.  Here's a good visual of what I'm talking about: link.

The source of the beam is like a fixed point source, changing direction by several degrees--but not really moving (translating) much at all, yet projecting and amplifying its own radial motion by a factor of r sin(theta), where r is the distance projected and theta is the angle swivelled through.

WTF?  What does trigonometry have to do with real life and making leaps? The light beam models something that interested me once: how small seemingly insignificant changes get amplified at a molecular level.

Quantum mechanics seems to defy the long-held maxim Natura non facit saltus.  This was Darwin's credo too: he believed in a smooth, uninterrupted evolution of species. But what if small but significant changes in genetic code did indeed lead to seemingly great leaps in change?



2 comments:

  1. Very cool post.

    We were going to get one with the Lee Lee's Logo for our opening but they are way expensive.

    We still might do it if what you know is gonna happen happens.

    Which we know it will. Stay tuned.

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  2. When that happens you will be rockstar famous.
    What will you do with all those groupies at your age?

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