A world of change

Posted on behalf of Leslie Sage

311949

Bahama reefs from the ISS.{credit}© 2016 IMAX Corporation. Photo courtesy of NASA{/credit}

Watching the new IMAX 3D documentary film A Beautiful Planet, I was struck when astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti noted how contemplating the planet for months on end from the International Space Station (ISS) convinced her that it is a spacecraft. ‘Spacecraft Earth’ may be an old theme, but Cristoforetti spoke with passion about how humanity, as its crew, must look after the ship. The film, which showcases spectacular footage of Earth shot from the ISS, is intended in part to spur awareness of the negative influence we are having on the planet.

A Beautiful Planet — directed and written by Toni Myers, whose work includes 3D documentary film Hubble 3D (2010) — is a collaboration between NASA and IMAX. After three years of testing digital IMAX equipment on board, NASA astronauts trained in using the cameras — Kjell Lindgren, Terry Virts and Barry Wilmore, as well as former astronaut Scott Kelly — did the shoots over 15 months from the Cupola, a module of the ISS with seven windows. Cristoforetti, Kimiya Yui of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency and cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov also contributed imagery.

Astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti in the ISS Cupola.

European Space Agency Astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti in the ISS Cupola.{credit}© 2016 IMAX Corporation. Photo courtesy of NASA{/credit}

I found the images stunning. The mass thunderstorms over Southeast Asia, with many lightning strikes per second, was extraordinary, as was the footage of the Atlantic Ocean around the Bahamas under a full Moon. The hundreds of plumes of smoke arising from ongoing slash-and-burn of the Amazonian rain forest were disturbing. Shots of nighttime North and South Korea were dramatic — the North almost completely dark, the South brightly spangled with light.

The film makes some serious points about climate change, such as the melting of the Greenland ice sheet and mass deforestation, without getting overly preachy. Yet it probably could have done with a little more preaching. One astronaut, for instance, noted that Earth provides everything we need to survive; the unstated subtext was that if we keep poisoning the air and water, it will no longer do so.

Lights at night over the Great Lakes region, US.

Nighttime shot of northeastern Canada, the US and beyond.{credit}© 2016 IMAX Corporation. Photo courtesy of NASA{/credit}

The actress Jennifer Lawrence narrates, her distinctive voice adding depth to what was, at times, a rather trite script. The 3D was the best I’ve ever seen, but I experienced some vertigo and nausea; anyone with balance problems should be prepared to close their eyes to rebalance.

Regaining equilibrium is ultimately what this film is about. I hope it convinces skeptics that protecting Earth is an urgent task.

Leslie Sage is senior physical sciences editor at Nature; his email is l.sage@us.nature.com.

A Beautiful Planet opens in IMAX cinemas on 29 April in the US, and 27 May in the UK.

 

For Nature’s full coverage of science in culture, visit www.nature.com/news/booksandarts.

Charlotte Brontë’s brushes with science

Portrait of Charlotte Bronte by J.H. Thompson, 1850s.

Portrait of Charlotte Brontë by J.H. Thompson, 1850s.{credit}© The Brontë Society{/credit}

 

I enter a room that is, in effect, a cabinet of curiosities. Glass-fronted cases reflecting shards of light are crammed with an odd array of objects — a pair of callipers, a Victorian stereoscope, wire-rimmed spectacles, daguerreotypes. A stuffed giraffe looms behind a desk. There is a faint savour of the natural history museum; the hint of a steampunk preoccupation with instrumentation. It seems an unlikely space for a meeting with one of English literature’s radical firebrands, but that is what this exhibition at Sir John Soane’s Museum London promises: an encounter with Charlotte Brontë.

Charlotte Brontë at the Soane marks the bicentenary of the novelist’s birth on 21 April. The exhibition — in nineteenth-century architect John Soane’s home, preserved as a museum — hinges on the Yorkshire novelist’s five trips to London between 1848 and 1853 to see her publisher George Smith. During these, the show’s curator Charlotte Cory told me, Brontë had several brushes with science — encounters with eminent specialists in physics and medicine, exposure to cutting-edge technologies. Yet this sharply observant writer left just a scatter of references to these experiences that leave us guessing in all sorts of ways.

Bronte embraced travel on Britain's burgeoning rail system.

Bronte embraced travel on Britain’s burgeoning rail system.{credit}From Frederick S. Williams, Our Iron Roads, ca. 1852, via Wikimedia Commons{/credit}

Jane Eyre — pioneering ‘psychological’ novel, instant bestseller — had emerged in 1847 as the work of ‘Currer Bell’. The pseudonymous mask slipped the next year on Brontë’s first trip to the city, spurred by an impetuous decision to clear up a rumour that her novel and those of sisters Anne and Emily (‘Acton’ and ‘Ellis’) were all by the same author. Brontë’s need for speed led her to embrace one of the era’s great technological advances — rail travel. “The coming of the railways was absolutely key for her independence,” noted Cory, and Brontë’s letter about the trip hints at the thrill of how she and Anne walked to Keighley station from Haworth in a thunderstorm, “got to Leeds and whirled up by the Night train to London” in a matter of hours, where they revealed their identities to an astonished Smith.

Under Smith’s aegis, the shy provincial became an unwilling celebrity in the city she dubbed “Babylon”. She met (and was verbally mauled by) literary lion William Makepeace Thackeray, and visited social theorist Harriet Martineau. Beyond the salon, London pulsed with scientific, medical and industrial innovation: the Industrial Revolution was in full spate. The Great Exhibition of 1851, coinciding with Brontë’s fourth visit to the city, was vivid proof.

The 'British Nave' at the Great Exhibition, 1851.

The ‘British Nave’ at the Great Exhibition, 1851.{credit}From Dickinson’s Comprehensive Pictures of the Great Exhibition of 1851, from the originals painted for Prince Albert, by Messrs. Nash, Haghe and Roberts.{/credit}

Housed in the vast glass-and-iron Crystal Palace at Hyde Park and masterminded by top technophile Prince Albert, it featured 100,000 objects, from hydraulic presses, steam hammers, barometers and electric telegraphs to velocipedes, microscopes, surgical instruments, ‘tangible’ ink for the visually impaired and kilometres of textiles.

The display of moving machinery at the Great Exhibition.

The display of moving machinery at the Great Exhibition.{credit}From Dickinson’s Comprehensive Pictures of the Great Exhibition of 1851, from the originals painted for Prince Albert, by Messrs. Nash, Haghe and Roberts{/credit}

The 6 million visitors generated enough surplus funds to seed the Science Museum, Natural History Museum and design treasurehouse the Victoria and Albert Museum. This was a show not just for gawkers, but for anyone with an interest in scientific endeavour and invention. It drew in Charles Darwin; photographer, mathematician and author Lewis Carroll; and eminent physicist David Brewster who, Cory told me, squired Brontë on one of her visits.

Physicist and experimental-optics pioneer David Brewster in the 1850s.

Physicist and experimental-optics pioneer David Brewster in the 1850s.{credit}Wikimedia Commons{/credit}

Brewster was a leading light in experimental optics. His advanced ‘lenticular’ stereoscope, replacing mirrors with prisms, is displayed at the Soane. He also explored polarised light, invented the kaleidoscope, and created a precursor of the Fresnel lens. Brewster and Brontë seem to have got along, as she noted in a letter to a friend:

Sir David Brewster came to take us to the Crystal Palace — I had rather dreaded this, for Sir David is a man of the profoundest science and I feared it would be impossible to understand his explanations of the mechanisms &c. indeed I hardly knew how to ask him questions — I was spared all trouble — without being questioned — he gave information in the kindest and simplest manner…

But in another letter about the exhibition, Brontë is more pungent:

… after all, its wonders appeal too exclusively to the eye, and rarely touch the heart or head. I make an exception to the last assertion, in favour of those who possess a large range of scientific knowledge. Once I went with Sir David Brewster, and perceived that he looked on objects with other eyes than mine.

The phrase “with other eyes” is provocative. Was Brewster gripped by technological aspects of the show that failed to dazzle Brontë? Interest is, after all, in the eye of the beholder, and an expert in the mechanics of light and vision might perceive the same object very differently from an artistic adept of the ‘inward eye’. Despite her poor vision (hence the spectacles at the Soane), Brontë had planned a career in art, but transmuted that visual and emotional precision into “deep, significant reality” on the page, as science writer George Henry Lewes wrote of Jane Eyre.

Brewster's lenticular stereoscope.

Brewster’s lenticular stereoscope.{credit}From Brewster’s The Stereoscope: Its History, Theory and Production, 1856{/credit}

About the objects of their gaze we can only theorise. Among the technologies on show was photography, and Brewster, who championed the calotype introduced by William Henry Fox Talbot, may well have steered Brontë towards a display. Yet here is another puzzle. At the time, every grandee from Queen Victoria to engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel sought to be ‘shot’, but Brontë, as far as we know, was never photographed. Some suspect it was vanity, given Brontë biographer Elizabeth Gaskell’s unforgiving verbal snapshot: “reddish face; large mouth & many teeth gone; altogether plain”. I wonder, however, whether Brontë felt she had exposed enough of herself in her literary explorations of intuitive consciousness.

That fascination with internal realities extended to the medical. Brontë’s last novel Villette (1853) is permeated with references to illness, has a physician as a central character, and features a drug-fuelled walk through a nighttime carnival. The inspiration is clear. Anne, Emily and their substance-abusing brother Branwell had died from tuberculosis within nine months of each other several years before. Moreover, Brontë’s hypochondriac father Patrick, prey to contemporary fears of ‘nervous disorders’, obsessively read Thomas John Graham’s 1827 Modern Domestic Medicine, as Sally Shuttleworth shows in Charlotte Brontë and Victorian Psychology (1996). So Brontë’s portrayals of the pathological — from the fiery ‘madwoman’ Bertha in Jane Eyre to Villette’s frozen, tortured Lucy Snowe — are unsurprising. (Even Brontë’s descriptions of some of the animals she saw at London Zoo have a Bertha-esque feel, from a hyena emitting “a hideous peal of laughter” to a cobra with the “eyes and face of a fiend”).

The physician John Forbes in 1852, by John Partridge (drawing).

The physician John Forbes in 1852, by John Partridge (drawing).{credit}US National Library of Medicine via Wikimedia Commons{/credit}

On her final trip to London in 1853 to check the proofs of Villette, Brontë sought to further probe extremes of human experience — “the real rather than the decorative side of Life”, as she saw it. She visited Newgate and Pentonville prisons and may have seen Bethlehem (Bedlam) Hospital with medical moderniser John Forbes, whom she had consulted years before about Anne’s health. George Smith related how in Newgate, Brontë responded compassionately to a prisoner who had allegedly killed her own child. But no letter from Brontë recording these visits has surfaced; and if she wrote none, it is an odd omission given her preoccupations, Cory noted.

Those preoccupations also led to a fascination with phrenology, the era’s pseudoscientific attempt to create a material theory of mind; the callipers in Cory’s show are the tool of the trade. On one London visit, Brontë had visited a practitioner anonymously with Smith to have her head ‘read’. The report is startling:

Temperament for the most part nervous… [The forehead] bears the stamp of deep thoughtfulness and comprehensive understanding. It is highly philosophical. It exhibits the presence of an intellect at once perspicacious and perspicuous…

The exhibition, including the dress Bronte wore to a dinner given by Thackeray.

A view of the exhibition, showing the dress Bronte wore to a dinner given by Thackeray.{credit}Gareth Gardner/Sir John Soane’s Museum London{/credit}

Ultimately, like the exhibition (the author may never have visited the museum but, Cory declared, “ought to have”), we must speculate in trying to understand Brontë’s take on science. What did this brilliant but relatively unsystematic student of the mind, this writer preoccupied with interiority, think of the Victorian endeavour to unpeel the secrets of the Universe, from geological strata to ‘ghostly’ conundrums such as energy?

Says Shuttleworth: “She was a voracious reader of the periodicals of the time, which carried detailed accounts of new scientific and medical ideas and advances. In the pages of her novels one can track the language of the psychology of the era, transformed into a new mode of psychological presentation. Charlotte Brontë was a writer both of her time, and in advance of it.”

After Brontë’s death in 1855, the ‘invisible Universe’ of atoms and rays was gradually empirically revealed. That Brontë had trawled the unseen currents of the psyche and put her findings in books so revealing of human behaviour testifies to the power of another way of seeing.

Charlotte Brontë at the Soane is at Sir John Soane’s Museum London13 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London, through 7 May.

 

For Nature’s full coverage of science in culture, visit www.nature.com/news/booksandarts.

Speaking volumes

2016 04 12_THIS IS A VOICE_Wellcome Collection 2

{credit}Wellcome Collection{/credit}

Posted on behalf of Ewen Callaway

A couple of months into my first reporting job, I wrote the story “Neanderthal speaks out after 30,000 years”. A research team had synthesized the voice of a Neanderthal by inferring the dimensions of the larynxes of three individuals. All they managed was a single vowel – a gruff ‘ee’ – but they used it to claim that Neanderthals could not utter a kind of vowel sound that is common to all human languages.

I was reminded of this story, still probably my most-read piece, as I entered This is a Voice, a compelling but sometimes scattershot exhibition on the human voice – from material qualities to meaning to myth – that opened last week at London’s Wellcome Collection.

Voice disguiser used by the Tiv people of Nigeria.

Voice disguiser used by the Tiv people of Nigeria.{credit}Pitt Rivers Museum{/credit}

“As early hominin groups became larger and physical grooming was no longer an efficient form of bonding, the voice kept individuals emotionally connected by creating alliances and group dynamics,” reads an introductory text, which goes on to explain that early humans sang in choruses to ward off predators.
Maybe so.

In the same gallery there sits: a nineteenth-century model of the larynx, a 2,600-year-old siren-shaped vase and a voice-manipulating device called an imborivungu, which the Tiv people of Nigeria once used to simulate the sounds of spirits — a duck call for deities, if you will. I was trying to piece this all together when my thoughts were interrupted by birdsong, or at least that’s what I thought the chirps were.

Dawn Chorus, an installation by artist Marcus Coates, is a series of video screens of sped-up footage showing people in everyday scenarios: their lounge, a doctor’s waiting room, their cars. These volunteers were played a dawn chorus of birdsong slowed down 16 times and instructed to imitate them. Their fast-forwarded facsimiles blared over loudspeakers. “If Darwin had this ability to speed up and slow down sounds, he would have found these amazing parallels” between birdsong and the human voice, Coates told a group of reporters at the press viewing. Maybe so.

This is a Voice intentionally keeps information to a minimum to encourage visitors to use their ears. And although headphones, clever listening walls with built-in private speakers, and isolation chambers fill the exhibit, the acoustic onslaught can be overwhelming. The trilling of Coates’ bird-men and women followed me through the first half of the show.

That was hard to ignore while I watched Dolmen Music, a mesmerizing 1981 composition by Meredith Monk. Female vocalists sway back and forth in their chairs as they produce ethereal sounds over the strains of a lone cello. Artist Emma Smith’s 5Hz offered respite from the birds.

5HZ, by Emma Smith.

5HZ, by Emma Smith.{credit}Max McClure{/credit}

Broadcast in over wireless headphones in a small octagonal room, the project is a 13-minute lesson in a language called 5hz; she created it with the help of psychologists and neuroscientists, who provided data on how the human brain responds to different vocal stimuli. The exhibit explains that the language is designed to enhance social bonding. What better way to bring strangers together than to crowd them into a small room and make them rehearse gibberish in unison?

The pieces that best convey the power of the human voice are about people struggling with their own or those of others. Filmmaker and audio producer Chris Chapman’s Avatar Therapy for Distressing Voices is a demonstration of a treatment developed by psychiatrist Julian Leff whereby people confront avatars that sound like people who have tormented them in the past. In the short film, a young woman (who is not visible) confronts a deep-voiced older male avatar who has just told her she is worthless. Chapman’s documentary Voice and Identity profiles two individuals who have experienced gender transitions, including voice-altering hormone treatments.

Avatar Therapy for Voice Hearers, Chris Chapman.

The Avatar Therapy for Distressing Voices, Chris Chapman.

This is a Voice ends in a red-velvet-cloaked room with a small recording booth inside it. Those who enter are greeted by a microphone and instructions to press a button and hold a single note for as long as they can. The recording is then added to a snowballing chorus that plays in parallel at the Royal Opera House across town in Covent Garden.

As I sang my best ‘Ahhhhh’ I couldn’t help but think that I, like many of the others who contributed to the song, carry a sliver of DNA inherited from Neanderthals. Scientists may have synthesised one of their prehistoric vowels – but why speak when you can sing?

Ewen Callaway is a reporter in Nature’s London office. He tweets at @ewencallaway. Listen in to a Nature podcast on This Is a Voice here

This Is a Voice runs at the Wellcome Collection at 183 Euston Road, London, through 31 July; it then tours to the Powerhouse, Sydney, in 2017.

 

For Nature’s full coverage of science in culture, visit www.nature.com/news/booksandarts.

 

 

 

Reflections of a Moonwalker

Posted on behalf of Elizabeth Gibney

LMOTM_5

Gene Cernan during the last lunar walk, as commander of the Apollo 17 mission in 1972.{credit}NASA{/credit}

The Moon landings – those grainy shots of men in bulky suits and stunning visions of Earthrise – have burned into the public consciousness for half a century. But to those who weren’t there to watch it live and who have seen human space travel since confined to Earth’s orbit, walking on the Moon seems like a distant fairytale (a fact that no doubt contributes to the conspiracy theory that it never happened).

The Last Man on the Moon, a new documentary film, is a beautiful and timely reminder of those extraordinary days when space exploration featured on prime-time television and the price of progress was fatalities of some of the world’s brightest and bravest pilots and engineers. Director Mark Craig captures this spirit from the astronauts themselves, while they are around to tell the story.

The film follows the life of Eugene (Gene) Cernan, a plain-spoken military man who in 1972 became the last person to walk on the Moon. Cernan started out as a young Navy jet pilot in the 1950s (a time when he says he felt “bullet-proof”), before heeding the call of President John F. Kennedy. At the height of the US space race with Soviet Russia in 1961, Kennedy challenged NASA to send a man to the Moon and back by the end of the decade. In 1963 Cernan was selected as one of the agency’s third group of astronauts. He reached space three times – first carrying out NASA’s second-ever spacewalk, as part of the Gemini 9 mission, then twice journeying to the Moon on Apollo 10 and Apollo 17.

Cernan now, at the Johnson Space Center, Houston.

Cernan now, at the Johnson Space Center, Houston.{credit}Mark Craig{/credit}

The Last Man on the Moon is at its best in recreating the spirit of the time and offering insight into the lives of a brave yet fallible group of extraordinary people. The movie could only have been made with the cooperation of the energetic 82-year-old Cernan. His narrative forms the bulk of the film, which Craig brings to life using funny, poignant interviews with his wife and other contemporaries, as well as archive material ranging from news clips to home movies. Computer-generated visuals add a dramatic tension to Cernan’s hair-raising descriptions of the space sequences, while a period soundtrack adds extra zip.

Cernan, Stafford and x of the Apollo 10 Mission

Cernan (left), Thomas Stafford and John Young of the Apollo 10 mission, 1969.{credit}NASA{/credit}

We witness a tight-knit group of ambitious astronauts from Cernan’s 1963 intake whose young families settled as neighbours in suburban Houston, Texas. Wives became friends, and photos of their get-togethers depict classic scenes of the era with everyone partying hard — perhaps aware that any trip could be an astronauts’ last. The images are reminiscent of television series Mad Men, albeit with even fewer women in leading roles.

There is a joy to seeing now seventy- and eighty-somethings such as Apollo 12 crew Dick Gordon and Alan Bean, and Apollo 13’s Jim Lovell, recollect lives as the nation’s heroes. Yet from the get-go, the film reminds us that reaching space can carry a heavy price. Today most space missions are robotic, and failures waste money and time, rather than lives (though Virgin Galactic’s tragic SpaceShipTwo accident in 2014 served as a stark remind of how dangerous human spaceflight remains). Back then, NASA never hid the fact that human risk was the price of progress. Between 1964 and 1969, nine astronauts died while working on agency projects. Cernan’s close calls included one in 1966, when the training plane flown alongside his, piloted by fellow astronauts Elliot See and Charles Bassett, crashed and killed them. In 1971, Cernan crashed a helicopter in training, and kept his scorched helmet as a souvenir.

Barbara Cernan during the Apollo 10 launch in 1969.

Barbara Cernan during the Apollo 10 launch in 1969.{credit}NASA{/credit}

The film is no reveal-all exposé; nor is it too rose-tinted. Alongside the professional triumphs and tragedies, it touches on what Cernan’s family sacrificed. His wife Barbara quips: “If you think going to the Moon is hard, try staying at home.” Fellow astronauts in the film acknowledge their single-mindedness and that there was no such thing as work-life balance; 60% of the astronauts from Cernan’s set ended up divorced.

The film leaves the audience to answer whether the drive of these men was selfish. Its opening scene juxtaposes images of present-day Cernan watching a rodeo, where a young bull-rider struggles to stay on his mount, with shots of the 1960s astronaut programme. But it also makes it clear that, for Cernan at least, the goal wasn’t personal glory — although he was ambitious. As he says, “The entire world was on board that spacecraft with us.”

As one of just 12 people to ever set foot on the Moon, Cernan says his experiences belong to everybody, especially the generations who weren’t around to see it. Today his goal is to charge kids with a sense that they can do something just as extraordinary — on Earth or in space. Watching the film left me pondering over the way human space exploration, which has demonstrated its phenomenal power to inspire and drive human understanding, has been reined in for the past 40 years.

Elizabeth Gibney is a physics reporter at Nature. She tweets at @LizzieGibney. 

The Last Man on the Moon is in cinemas from 8 April, with a nationwide live Q&A with Eugene Cernan on 11 April only. For Nature’s full coverage of science in culture, visit www.nature.com/news/booksandarts.