Killer Ozone? 70
Tufriast writes "This will make you think twice about an H2... The BBC News has reported that the death toll in U.S. cities might have a correlation to the ozone levels in them. The article mentions several major U.S. cities, and notices the upward trend in premature deaths as pollution levels rise. The results can also be found in the Journal of the American Medical Association."
Re:What? (Score:1, Flamebait)
Not very scientific (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Not very scientific (Score:2, Funny)
In uninhabited areas where there is no pollution, there has never been a premature death! Not even one!
Irrefutable proof!
Re:Not very scientific (Score:3, Funny)
Daniel
Re:Not very scientific (Score:1)
And your chance of voting Democrat!
--
Evan
Re:Not very scientific (Score:2)
Re:Not very scientific (Score:1)
And based on study, the chances of you dying prematurely are increased by a whopping .52%. This assumes you are already going to die prematurely. If you start with 0 chance of dying prematurely and move to one of these cities, you will have an increase of .52% over 0. Wow . . . 0%
So, this is all moot unless you already know what your current chances are of dying prematurely (assuming of course, that you will).
"It's at the point of uncertainty that all things are possible. This can be a real problem."
Re:Not very scientific (Score:1)
If you died, who's to say that wasn't when you were supposed to die?
I smell a George Carlin routiene here, but I couldn't hold a candle to that master.
Re:Not very scientific (Score:1)
Re:Not very scientific (Score:2)
Re:Not very scientific (Score:4, Insightful)
Why I agree that using correlation to suggest causation is a very weak argument, there are several other studies that demonstrate that ozone is definitively bad for us. What I don't understand is, how is this news? I was taught this back in the early 80's, based purely off of human physiology data. It was made very clear to us that ozone near the ground was bad, ozone high up in the ozone layer is good, and there's no way (known) to move ozone from the "bad place" to the "good place".
Re:Not very scientific (Score:2)
here in belgium in the summer there's sometimes an 'ozone alert', if the measured ozone concentrations get too high then on the news/weather forecast they warn for it, that older people and children shouldn't do any heavy activities in the middle of the day..
Re:Not very scientific (Score:1)
Remember, United States.
The state of Florida was having almost weekly hurricans, I haven't seen a winter with a good (meaning it lasts for more than a day or two!) snow in the last 12 years up here in Seattle Washington,
and,
oh yah,
THE FREAKING POLAR ICE CAPS ARE MELTING.
(yes yes always are, but at a rather rapid rate now!)
and just now, JUST now, the current administration says that there MIGHT be something worth looking into.
and that they'll get around to it.
When ever they feel like
Re:Not very scientific (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Not very scientific (Score:2)
Re:Not very scientific (Score:3, Funny)
They will have us mistake the effect of ozone for that of carbon oxide as they hade us mistake the effect of the poison sodium fluoride for the effect of calcium fluoride. See
1 [fluoride-journal.com]
2 [t-online.de]
3 [naturalfacts.com.au]
Re:Not very scientific (Score:2)
This is a usage of the term 'isotope' I'm not familiar with. An isotope of an element is an atom with a different number of neutrons, but with similar chemical properties. I've never seen varying numbers of a particular element in a molecule as an 'isotope' before. Is this correct usage?
Re:Not very scientific (Score:5, Funny)
In fact, you ought to make this double-blind.
Create two big rooms with machine-regulated environments. One room is full of noxious pollutants. The other room is full of clean air filled with known-harmless (or near-harmless) chemicals that emulate the smell of pollution. Label the rooms, machines, and tanks of supply chemicals with a simple "A" or "B" so those administering the experiment can't influence the participants.
Now, abduct newborns from hospitals across the world. Do this at as many places as possible, so as to get the best random distribution of human participants. Then, put half (selected randomly) in room A, and the remaining in room B.
Observe the morbidity and mortality rates over time. When everybody has died, the experiment designers/evaluators will get the data back, match up the data for "A" and "B" with the conditions for each room, and there you go.
But, there's still a flaw. The administrators might guess which room is truly cleaner based on the health conditions in each. To correct for this, one option is to create a third room that is clean, but sneak in there during the night and randomly kill some participants. Another option is to create dozens of rooms, all with varying amounts of pollution, and give teams of ninjas assignments, distributed randomly (if you just murder the kids in the clean room, you'll end up with similar mortality rates, and no useful result; also, ninjas or something similar must be used, so that the murders can occur without anybody involved in the experiment catching on; the administrators, of course, will be told about the ninjas, but will not know who they intend to attack, nor will they haev any way of detecting them; the murders would, of course, have to be done with poisons that haev very similar effects to long term pollutant exposure).
There's still a few problems with this set-up; anybody want to take over refining the design from here?
I'm not sure... (Score:2)
I can't quite put my finger on it, and I'm not trying to be alarmist or a Luddite, but it's possible there are some ethical or moral problems in this experiment. Not likely, but still possible.
We should have legal check it out and get back to us.
Re:Not very scientific (Score:1)
And in a truly scientific experiment, I doubt the administrators would kill any participants to skew the results (I realize it was tongue-in-cheek).
Animal testing, as much as some people despise it, can lead to prolonging human life and improving the quality of human life.
Re:Not very scientific (Score:2)
Very true. If it were straightforward to place a number (call it the "Gaia" factor) on the overall health (measured by diversity and stability, perhaps?) of the planet, then we could run simulations to determine how much animal experimentation is fair before we're doing more harm than good.
But, that kind of thing is horridly complicated, and sounds a lot like the sociopsychomathem
Mod parent down (Score:3, Informative)
If you want to be scientific, how about starting with actually reading the article you want to discredit? Your criticism is not only ill-founded, you don't even seem to know what claim it is you are trying to refute. Not exacly a shining example of scientific
H_2 or O_3? (Score:2, Troll)
Re:H_2 or O_3? (Score:4, Informative)
But hydrogen is what I thought at first glance too...
Hummer2 (Score:2)
That would make sense, and does seem more logical than making such an obvious mistake. Didn't occur to me.
Re:H_2 or O_3? (Score:1)
At any rate, do you really think the sort of person who is contemplating buying a hummer is going to be worried about the possible side effects of emmissions on other people?? They already ignored the environment. (and therefore other people)
How can you isolate for one variable? (Score:1)
Pretty easily (Score:2)
As you know (but others may not), high temperatures contribute to smog formation. Smog goes up by about 3% for each degree over 70 fahrenheit. [lbl.gov]
Its not the H2s (Score:2)
Re:Its not the H2s (Score:5, Informative)
How do you "burn" oxygen?
A properly designed ionic air filter does not produce any detectable ozone. There ARE some types of air cleaners that are designed specifically for ozone production - ozone is a powerful antiseptic and rids the air of all sorts of airborne bacteria and the like.
=Smidge=
Re:Its not the H2s (Score:2)
Re:Its not the H2s (Score:4, Informative)
The black stuff is dust and dirt and other crud that used to be in the air. The devices work by ionizing particles and some gas molecules in the air and using an electric field to move them through the device. The "collection plates" are the positive electrode, and when the ionized air and dust contact with it, they lose their negative charge. Dust particles get stuck on the plate and are thus removed from the air.
Some ionized material makes it through, and this is what collects on your walls. Ever try rubbing a baloon on your shirt and sticking it to the wall? Same thing.
If properly designed, the voltages are not sufficient to generate significant ozone.
=Smidge=
H2 (Score:2)
Re:H2 vs O3.. (Score:2)
Re:H2 vs O3.. (Score:1)
OMG! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:i don't think therefore I am not (Score:2)
Oh please. You're turning an article that is sensationalism at its best into a political flamefest.
People who voted republican probably do think twice about things. Maybe, they even think three or four times. People who voted democratic probably do as well. If you judge people's IQ's, ability of rational thought, or their environmental concerns by their religion or political ideologies, then you have some serious priority issues that need resolving.
Who the hell mods this crap as insightful??
Re:i don't think therefore I am not (Score:1)
Re:i don't think therefore I am not (Score:1)
I repeat your link below but clickable for the convenience of those yet to see this.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4013719.stm [bbc.co.uk]
And, didn't God state that we were supposed to be his stewards of the Earth? Would you be pleased if you came back home to discover your babysitter had a party and let your baby starve? I get the idea God is gonna be pissed. Really pissed.
H2=Hummer2 (Score:1, Informative)
Misuse of "Happy Jack" (Score:2)
Unfortunately, I have. That's the commercial that bastardizes the meaning of The Who's "Happy Jack" and turns it completely on its head.
The song speaks about a kid who's a little slow who gets abused by pricks and bullies, but who somehow manages to remain upbeat and happy despite their abuse, thus prevailing.
The commercial seems to highlight the line "they couldn't pr
lots of sarcasm or what? (Score:2)
I'm hoping it's the first one, kinda, although i'd be happy if I never saw an H2
Thankfully, the H2 is not trendy in C'ville (Score:2)
Speaking as one of the ones living in an area where the H2 is not trendy (Charlottesville, VA, and I don't think it's a coincidence that we were declared the best city [usatoday.com] to live in the US!), I was not making a bad joke (or even a good one!). That H2 stood for Hummer2 never crossed my mind until someone pointed it out.
Of course, this gets back to all the other acronym's used on slashdot (e.g., LSB not standing for least significant bit). Whether an acronym/abbreviation is obvious or not depends on one's expe
Re:Thankfully, the H2 is not trendy in C'ville (Score:2)
agnots!
acronyms get NASTY on this site.
Article is interesting because (Score:5, Interesting)
It's well known that long term exposure to ground level ozone attacks your lungs and plastic and rubber products (tires, molding on your car, rubberized and vinyl fabrics, etc.)
This AMA report sez that short term correlation suggests further study. Well of course, you want to know what you're up against.
It's not the H2 that's the problem. One old V-8 that's exempt from emmission testing and driving around on 6 cylinders causes more of a problem than a hundred hummers.
The poor need their cars so these things stay on the road.
Actually, the H2 is a problem (Score:3, Informative)
Ironically, many California cities restrict trucks over 6500 lbs GVW to truck routes; they wouldn't have to raise mileage standards to get those Hummers and Durangoes off the roads, all they'd have to do is enforce the truck restrictions they already have.
pollution in cities is much better now (Score:2, Insightful)
S
Re:pollution in cities is much better now (Score:2)
That is if you are talking about air pollution. For other forms of pollution, the story is a little different.
Go back towards the end of the 19th century and one of the big urban pollution problems was horse manure (I'd rather deal with ozone than finely ground horseshit). One of the big selling points of the electric streetcar was that it didn't have the pollution problems associated with th
but it could still be a lot better (Score:2)
I bet the air in LA was a lot cleaner in 1580 than it is now.
Re:but it could still be a lot better (Score:1)
Danger from laser printers? (Score:1)
This [aerias.org] page (dunno if their data is accurate) says "Concentrations of ozone in a room where laser printers are being used can exceed the currently regulated standard for ozone in the outdoor air."
Huh, guess there's a downside to faste
Yes (Score:2)
Yes having a source of any poisonous gas without good ventilation is bad.
Wich is way any half way decent garage will have a setup to vent the exhaust fans from cars they are working on to the outside.
Why forklifts dedicated to working inside are electric.
Why non-smokers want smokers to stand outside in the freezing rain. (well actually this is because we hate the goddamn slackers and their 15 minute smoking breaks every half hour)
Any decent copier/printer room will have an exhaust sy