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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

Check out Boyle's biography or send a message to Cosmic Log via cosmiclog@msnbc.com.



Silly mysteries solved

Posted: Friday, August 07, 2009 9:30 AM by Alan Boyle


Duane Hoffmann / msnbc.com
Where do missing socks go? Would you believe they drop into a mini-black hole?

Now let us consider cosmic mysteries of a completely different sort ... for instance, why do socks disappear in the laundry?

Many hypotheses have been put forward: The eminent thinker Jerry Seinfeld once proposed that socks carefully plan their escape. Another researcher invokes quantum mechanics. Some crackpots even suggest looking under your washer's agitator or in your closet. Can you believe that?

Last weekend, an eminent panel of theorists (including myself) gathered to reflect upon "cannibalistic socks" and other riddles at the SpoCon science-fiction and fantasy convention in Spokane, Wash. I think we may have made as much headway as the Solvay Conference did back in Einstein's day. Here's the rundown on our results:

Where disappearing socks go
Some people have suggested that socks go missing in the laundry because a space-time warp somehow transforms them into belly-button lint and dust bunnies that appear out of nowhere. That's only half-right. Take a look at this diagram of the modern clothes dryer, then note the similarity to this picture of the ATLAS detector at Europe's Large Hadron Collider. Is that mere coincidence?

I didn't think so.

Dryers have been spinning away since long before the LHC was ever conceived, driving socks into collisions so energetic they build up powerful jolts of static electricity. Can anyone deny there's a chance - even if it's a 1-out-of-10500 chance - that such collisions could generate miniature black holes? And can any scientists truthfully say there is absolutely zero chance that such black holes could grow large enough to gobble up one of a pair of socks, leaving the other behind as a kind of laundry-hamper Hawking radiation?

I didn't think so.

Ladies and gentlemen, I give you ... the Not-So-Large Ban-Lon Collider. Your laundry room contains a device perfect for doing small-scale experiments in string theory. (Or is that yarn theory?)

Interstellar travel
How can we possibly get to other stars? Some at SpoCon held out hope for the Heim Drive, a device that is supposed to convert gravitational energy into electromagnetic energy and send spacecraft zooming through shortcuts in space-time. The last time I wrote about this, theoretical physicist Lawrence Krauss told me the idea was "completely crackpot," but some Cosmic Log correspondents thought that judgment was way too harsh. I'm not sure which would take longer: making the centuries-long trip to Alpha Centauri using existing propulsion technology, or finding a way to build an honest-to-goodness warp drive.

However, there is another possibility that I'm surprised hasn't gotten more attention. It's a little something I call the Clerk Drive.

Have you ever noticed how hardware-store clerks seem to disappear instantly the moment you need advice on whether to buy the 5/16 or the 11/32 doohickey? I do believe many of them have mastered the knack of quantum teleportation to the break room, achieving what is effectively faster-than-light speed over short distances. All we need to do is find a few with a sense of enterprise, give them a title and put them in command of our first starships. The title? That's obvious: Captain Clerk.

Perpetual motion
Talking about breakthrough propulsion naturally led to the search for a perpetual-motion machine - and the solution to that perennial poser has been known for a long time. Because cats (like geckos) always land on their feet, and toast always lands on the floor buttered-side down, all you have to do is attach a buttered-side-up piece of toast to a cat's back (or to its feet, in an alternate design). Logic dictates that when you throw the cat up in the air, it should levitate above the ground like a frog spinning in a solenoid.

Some theories suggest that you could channel "cat-toast" power by attaching a turbine to the spinning cat, as shown here. The effect would last only as long as the cat stayed alive, but you could get around that limitation by putting the cat in a box with a radiation device. That way, there's always a 50 percent chance that the cat is alive ... as long as you don't open the box.

The only problem is that a recent study has questioned the whole antigravity cat hypothesis. This research claims that the cat would land on its feet, but the toast would eventually flip buttered-side-down anyway. The probability of that happening hits 100 percent if the cat can find an expensive carpet to curl up on.

Mars and the Maya
When I got back to the office, I came across a couple of e-mail messages on matters that were just as much on the scientific fringe - but motivated by serious concerns. One was from Mariele Bogran, telling me that the Great Mars Hoax ("Mars will be as big as the moon in August") was starting to get mixed up with tales of the coming Maya apocalypse:

"I am writing to inquire about the Mars hoax. Recently a similar e-mail to the one you have mentioned came to my attention. After looking for some facts to back it up I immediately came to find the Cosmic Log you posted last year. Now, I live in Honduras, and as you may know, the Mayas had a great empire here in Copan. The Mayas predicted the Mars sighting in their calendar thousands of years ago. So this e-mail has been creating quite a buzz in Copan. Proposals for a major festival and activities revolving around the Mars sighting are being drawn up. However, before any further steps are being taken, I would like to confirm whether the claims in this e-mail are true or false. ..."

If the e-mail to which Bogran refers is the same one that makes the round every August, it's a garbled version of outdated truth. Back in August 2003, the planet Mars was closer to Earth than it had been in tens of thousands of years. If you peered at it through a telescope under the best conditions, the Red Planet might have looked as big as the moon does when seen with the naked eye. But Mars will never come as close as the moon, and the planet poses absolutely no danger to Earth.

This month isn't a particularly good time to observe Mars. The next close encounter is due in January 2010. At that time, it will be almost twice as far away as it was in 2003 - as illustrated on this Web page. By the way, it'll be even farther away in 2012, when the ancient Maya calendar silently resets itself.

The 12th planet
My reports about Jupiter's Great Black Spot prompted this question from Danilie Howe: "Could the spot on Jupiter be the 12th planet?" That's a reference to the Nibiru legend, which claims the Sumerians knew about a faraway planet that periodically entered the inner solar system and created havoc on Earth.

I dashed off a quick note saying that the impact was likely caused by an object that measured only a few hundred meters (yards) in width - far too small to be a planet. Howe wrote back, asking if I knew where the 12th planet was.

If she meant a threatening planet like Nibiru, my answer would be that such a planet is not known to exist. As I write in Chapter 13 of "The Case for Pluto," a large planet could theoretically exist far out on the fringes of the solar system, perhaps out in the Oort Cloud. No existing telescope is powerful enough to detect such a world, although that situation may change. Even if Planet X existed, it wouldn't pose any threat to Earth in the foreseeable future.

NASA's David Morrison has written extensively about the astronomical side of the Nibiru myth, and language scholar Michael S. Heiser handles the historical side. Heiser contends that the Sumerians used "Nibiru" to refer to Jupiter, or to Mercury, or to a star - but not to a planet beyond the five known to the ancients.

The question remains, however: Where is the 12th planet? Today, we know of four terrestrial planets (Mercury, Mars, Venus and Earth), four giant planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune) and five dwarf planets (Eris, Pluto, Ceres, Makemake and Haumea). That makes 13, and there are probably many more yet to be recognized (though the International Astronomical Union currently draws the line at the biggest eight).


Based on illustrations by NASA, ESA and A. Feild (STScI)
This graphic compares the sizes of five dwarf planets and their moons with the size of Earth and its moon. The top row shows, from left, Eris and its moon, Dysnomia; Pluto and its three moons, Charon, Nix and Hydra; and Makemake. The bottom row shows Haumea and its moons, Namaka and Hi'iaka; Ceres; and Earth's moon. A small slice of Earth's disk is visible at the bottom of the picture.

OK, so which of those is 12th on the list? Just for argument's sake, I'm going to go with the IAU's chronological order of designation as planets (dwarf or otherwise). The status of the first 11 was established by the IAU's 2006 resolution, which means Makemake went 12th a little more than a year ago, and Haumea went 13th last September.

Therefore, if you really press me to identify the 12th planet, I'd go with Makemake - which is roughly 50 times farther away from the sun than we are. Even at its closest point, it's still 35 times farther away and thus poses no threat to our planet. The only thing threatened by Makemake and the other dwarfs is our preconception of what a planet has to be.

Do you have additional thoughts on scientific myths or mirth? Feel free to pass them along below. I'm on vacation through Aug. 16, but I'll still check in every now and then to approve your comments.

More silly science:


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Comments

the mini black hole is a better explanation than gremlins...

but gremlins can hide anything in plain sight...

socks are child's play...

what else can a mini black hole, trapped inside a clothes dryer do?
My only suguestion for adding to your list, and I have even thought of writing a peice myself on this . Does, or is your computer giving you, or some one you know, tourettes syndrome ? I like jokeing about it when I hear people cussing at a computer . Just my 2 cents
Alexander Calder made a perpetual motion machine from string, balls, bowls and fishing poles.

It was displayed at MOMA back in the early/mid 1980s.

In all this time, after watching the device for many hours in real time, and considering its operation numerous times since, I can think of no reason why it would have sever stopped...except the exhibit was dismantled after its run.

I'm sure there's a record of the Calder Retrospective at MOMA somewhere online.

Check it out.

Oh, yeah...isn't Foucalt's Pendulum a perpetual motion device...if one ever stops, we'll never know...like the proverbial tree in the forest, eh?
Thanks for the Silly Friday article Alan, nice to have a little levity here once in a while.  Sure seems you've been doing some wool gathering and have come up with some real hilarious items to discuss.

I don't think there are black holes forming in dryers, more like mini black holes developing in people's brains as they forget to put the sock into the dryer in the first place.  Considering how much lint I clean out of my dryer's filter I often wonder how I have anything left in there to actually wear.
Alan,
At last, a cogent explanation for the missing socks!  Well done!  Mayhaps your opus will shake the IAU out of their silliness, as well.  I am sure that there is equal probability of both being true.

Did you catch the Physorg report of the tactile holograms?  Captain Clerk may have his holodeck yet!  FTL (That's Faster Than Light) drive and holodecks on the horizon.  Can life get any more exciting?
The discussion of "where do disappearing socks go" reminds me of a piece by Charles Osgood on CBS a number of years ago. He was commenting on the problem of what to do with the remaining unmatched socks, and suggested (in verse) the everyone with these unmatched singles gather together and exchange their singles in order to find matches. He suggest it be in New York; it would be called the New York Sock Exchange.
Everyone knows that missing socks to into the hozone.
Love it, and the cat and toast go marching on or not?
The Black Hole in the Maytag Galaxy is the obvious culprit for the missing sock dilemma. The space-time continuum is suspended while the dacron-cotton warp theory accelerates the mass beyond our galaxy, resulting in a splash drive conflict with the automatic drying cycle.
Haha I love this article, very Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy-esque. Especially the first three bits.
Thank you Alan! This was such a joy to read.
Don't know about all the other things you investigated, but I'm familiar with the vanishing socks phenomenon.  Folk legend has long claimed that socks are the larval form of wire hangers, but does not give explanation for what triggers such a metamorphosis.  Who can know?  Our reality is a wonderful and terrible thing.    
On the subject of planets versus dwarf planets, why not just follow Gene Roddenberry's example as used on Star Trek: they are all planets, but there are different classes of planets. Earth is a class M planet for example, while a class D planet is just a "great rock in space". This system of classification could be far more descriptive than just planet or dwarf planet. Perhaps a class I planet would be an ice world like KBOs, and class G planets would be gas giants like Jupiter.
Doesn't this make sense?
My socks always escape from the dryer (or somewhere). And I used to go nuts trying to find them. Especially when it was time for me to go to the office. But someone told me how to solve this problem. Buy 10 pairs of the same color. Now just dip your hand and pick any two...
What a horrible waste of time and energy trying to figure out where socks go. It is a well known fact that they are transformed into wire clothes hangers. If you doubt this just look at the correlation between lost socks and the number of wire hangers in your home. Focus on the important askpect of the problem, HOW does it happen.
Nonsense!  Heat energy in a dryer causes socks to metamorphose into coat hangers and translate through hyperspace to the nearest closet.  Proof:  We always have more coat hangers than we think we do and fewer socks.
No, no, no my great uncle  invented a washer and drier years ago, and they lost socks by making lent of them. He called it the,"Sock-O-Matic",cause he thought it would sale lots of socks so he sold his invention to Sears Roebuck. Sears renamed it the "Kenmore" washer and drier.
Northrop Grumman, among others, has been studying and testing "Hypersonic" propulsion possibilities for fixed wing aircraft for some time. This theory has the aircraft create its own shock waves that the air vehicle then "rides" at Hypersuper speeds without afterburners or other conventional propulsion. In theory, this could be developed further to provide for interstellar travel, though the distances would be limited to human capability and capacity.  
The universe is just a bubble in God's beer.
Where do socks go ??

A friend went o the laundromat, and put in his clothes, which included 3 pairs of socks.  When the wash was done, he only had 2 pair and a single sock.  Next time he went, he put in his 2 remaining pairs of socks.. When tthe wash was done, he had 1 pair and a single sock.  Next time, he decided to outsmort the "sock thief", so he tied his remaining pair of socks together.. When he took out his laundry, there was the pair of socks, but all his other clothes were shredded top pieces..  There was also a note inside the washer that read "It's not nice to mess (the f word not used in this forum) with Mother Nature".

I saw the Jerry Seinfeld stand-up bit about the socks. It was hysterical! He also talked about the "mysterious hair on the shower wall", which is especially troubling if you are using someone else's shower.

What most likely happens to "lost socks" is they are accidentally left in the hampers or under beds or stuck to the side of the washing machine drum to be washed with the next load.
Five minutes of my life I will never get back. This should have been called Silly Solutions to Mysteries.
my theory on lost socks is hanger heaven, they magically appear in the closet as all those stupid empty hangers. don't know how it's done but it happens in my house all the time.
So, Where did the other sock go????
I know what happens to missing socks in my house: a brown tabby scatters/hides them all over the house. Perhaps he uses some feline version of the Clerk Drive to travel to other people's houses and abscond with their socks.

Signed, One of the sock-stealer's personal assistants
How do shoes wind up lying on the side of the road? Where is the other shoe?
Figured it out!  Socks when in the dryer produces static electricity, when other garments ie (pants, underwear, shirts) happen to come in contact with the socks, the socks sometimes get inside the leg of the pants, sleeves of the shirts or even inside the underwear.  That is the explanation of where the socks have escaped to.

Thanks for listening
Everyone knows as discovered by Robert Capon, that the dryer connects to a dimension inhabited by monopods. The monopods hop about on one leg and thus need only one sock. Monopods can't understand the need for two socks so they just take one. Being ethical creatures they don't think they shoud take someting without giving something back, so they do, wire coat hangers!
:-)
One of my missing socks was hanging out of the sleeve
of a sweater that I grabbed and threw across my shoulders. I discovered it while in line at a store.
Pantyhose were washed with my slacks and I was sitting
at my desk and felt something in my pants leg. I went
to the lady's room and there was my pantyhose. Now that we have fabric sheets socks don't dissapear as
often.
If I read this correctly, then running a buttered cat in a sock through the dryer has the potential to be a real planet-killer.  To those at home, DO NOT TRY THIS.  Large amounts of melted butter can seriously damage your dryer.  
This is one of the dumbest articles I have ever read and it really gives testament to the garbage that is 24/7 news.  Have to fill out all 24 hours SOMEhow don't you?  
Every Superman fan knows where the 12th planet is.  It is on the precise opposite side of the sun from us, has the same orbit, and thus we never see it.  It is called The Bizarro World.
Why all the mystery about socks?  Everyone knows that they form that ring around Saturn.  My mom and dad told me so.
I think the spin cycle on my washer is so fast, my missing socks have been shot into another dimension or have achieved hyperdrive.
I'm sure they're having more fun than I am, forming diverse pairs, dancing the samba and mocking me from a parallel universe or something.
Sigh.
Very easy solution for missing socks. Get yourself a cat (will need to love socks as if they were their own kittens, male or female, doesn't matter.)

Said cat will be able to locate missing socks from wherever they may have gone to, whether it be a black hole, an alternate universe or simply dropped on the floor as you are carrying the dry clothes out of the dryer to wherever you fold them.

These cats will make a pile of your missing (and often times non missing) socks most frequently right in the middle of your living room, or another favorite spot is the middle of your bedroom.

Since acquiring one of these miraculous cats myself, I have not lost a single sock in 15 years!
Robert, TX
So THAT'S why I have this problem with cursing out my PC!  
   I addressed the issue of missing socks years ago in my essay titled Sock today, Gone Tomorrow. In it I convincinlgy proved that the disappearance of socks is part of their life cycle, Much as a catepillar transforms into a butterfly, the common sock transforms into a wire coat hanger. Haven't you ever noticed that wire coat hangers accumulate in your closet far faster than could be accounted for by trips to the dry cleaner....well there is your answer, sock transformation!! In the final state of their lives, the hangers are transformed into Toyotas. Neat,simple and nature is pleased. :)
Clothes driers send socks to a parallel universe.  Socks are not the larval form of clothes hangers; paper clips are.  The adult form is a racing bike, at least according to the science fiction story "All the Seas With Oysters"
None of these theories work.  The truth is that they just lose their socks appeal and disappear to mope.
I actually found many of my missing socks once.  When the dryer broke, we removed the drum.  Behind the drum were many, but not all, of the missing socks--the dryer really does eat them.
"So that’s the truth of if fellows.  There’s no great sock conspiracy.  People don’t realize how long they have had a pair of socks, how many times they separate their socks and put them back together again, or even how many pairs of socks they have. It’s a miracle they can find a matching pair at all, statistically.  

I just checked, swear to God, I just found a pair of thermal hunting socks I’ve had for at least the last thirty years! Yup, bought them at the same Modell’s, Fulton Street, in Brooklyn when I was still married to my late wife, and she’s been dead for the last twenty years, rest her soul!"
http://clcking.com/Stories.aspx
Sorry to have missed what seems like a great SpoCon discussion...

Not to be too serious, but could the 12th planet be Haley's comet?

And as for socks... I like the collider theory, it makes a lot of sense.  It also explains where all of that static electricity comes from.  So... if dryer sheets minimize static electricity, if I put a five dryer sheets in, could it keep the black holes from forming and might I end up with all of my socks? : \
You are giving out to much info. Human!!!!!!!
There was no sock.  It's just the dryer screwing with your mind.
It took me 54 years to find where the socks really go. I've found them in the cuffs of sheets, folded in towels, behind the dryer, stuck to the inside of my pants and once under the stove :)
   The only flaw in Avram Davidsons theory in his story is that Paper Clips rarely if ever go missing, especially if you link them together in an endless chain out of bordeom as I do and of course there is the fact that the world has not become filled with racing bikes (in fact you can actually go for months without seeing one)On the other hand the missing sock, extra coat hanger ratio is about equal and there are I believe approximately 3.7 Toyotas to every man woman and child on the planet. There are 5 of them on my lawn now ...watching me...I have to go...more later.
I know the answer, it is quite easy, the missing sock has merely been displaced to the dryer's lint filter.  Exactly 1 sock worth of lint is produced each load. Now, you want to become so rich that you could hire Bill Gates as your laundry maid?  Invent a machine into which you put the dryer lint, push a button, and it knits/outputs/restores 1 complete sock.  THAT, my friends, is would be true innovation.
  Several years ago I arrived at a somewhat similar solution to an even more important cosmological question. What is the source of the mysterious "dark matter" which, while not visible in any part of the electromagnetic spectrum, still generates the enormous, but unexplained, gravitational fields that hold the galaxies together.  
  My answer--sun glasses, pocket combs and guitar picks!  They are all dark and they all disappear mysteriously. I am convincede that they end up orbiting in intergallactic space and are responsible for maintaining the large scale structure of the universe.
 One obvious objection is that the human race does not lose a sufficient mass of these objects to result in the observed cosmological effects.  This suggests and answer to another important question " are we alone in the universe?"  No! there are obviously many other races of intelligent beings, all of whom use (and lose) sunglasses, pocket combs and guitar picks.
  The unavoidable conclusion-- we live in a universe of Elvis Impersonators!!
At least now the mystery of where all my wire coat hangers have gone to is solved. Apparently they don't like my closets and have fostered themselves out to new homes.

Personally, I think my socks are escaping through the dryer vent and lurking until I release their mate to the wild also. After I have done that, they return. It is their idea of humor.


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