To celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of Star Trek, the Canadian mint will be issuing commem- orative coinage with images of the franchise’s original series—including solid gold Star Fleet emblem communicator badges with a face value of C$200, though as bullion worth over one thousand. For those of us on a yeoman’s salary, there are smaller-denominations as well as other collectibles. I think all this excitement is wonderful and well-deserved, although it’s a bit ironic, I think, as the economics of the Star Trek Universe is not just cashless but seems close to utopian.
Friday, 10 June 2016
gold-pressed latinum
mason-dixon
catagories: ⚖️, ๐บ๐ธ, ๐, architecture, Star Wars
agronomy-om-nom
katzenjammer, caterwaul
Thursday, 9 June 2016
unobtainium
The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) just presented four new names for hitherto unnamed elements—three for places: Japan, Tennessee and Moscow plus one in honour of Russian-Armenian physicist Yuri Tsolakovich Oganessian, responsible for discovering the heaviest elements on the periodic table.
Submitted for consideration for the public and the scientific community until November, these designations have not been finalized, and writing for The Verge, Elizabeth Lopatto has a few alternate proposals. Rather than Nihonium (Nh, which sounds rather bleak and nihilistic) for Ununtrium (eka-thallium or Element 113), Lopatto suggests Maneki-nekonium as most representative of Japanese culture, and introduces us to a new concept in the mono no aware (็ฉใฎๅใ), an empathy for impermanence, like appreciating the fleeting beauty of cherry-blossoms and as poetic as Virgil’s characterization lacrimรฆ rerum—the tears of things, and an apt name as these new elements are all expected to be pretty unstable. Other ideas for Moscovium (Mc) include Kareninium (for Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina) and Honktonkine for Tennessine (Ts). What are your ideas? I cannot believe that another the latest naming-convention, science is allowing the public any input.


