Red Tide, Quark Soup and Nitric Oxide

Red Tide, Quark Soup and Nitric Oxide

We”re still on Marco Island where, supposedly, the red tide was

receding. However, everyone agrees that we”ve been coughing

on reaching certain areas along the shore. Then, yesterday, I saw

another spectacle to add to the vultures and conches mentioned

earlier (2/29/00 column). This time there were thousands of little

scallops washed up on the beach, many of them clapping their

shells like little PAC-men. The creatures were so dense that it

looked like masses of seaweed covering the beach from 10-20

yards away. Those “harmful algae” we discussed (3/14/00

column) are still around.

Following up on Viagra and nitric oxide, NO, the subjects of my

very first column (5/12/99), I couldn”t help notice the full page

color ad by Pfizer for Valentine”s Day. The ad promoted Viagra

as “an official sponsor” of Valentine”s Day! I presume that, since

the quotation marks were also in the ad, it was a tongue-in-cheek

proclamation of said sponsorship.

It turns out that the search for more effective aids to intimacy is

not the only active research area in the sexual arena. The March

2000 issue of Discover magazine had a very brief item about a

study performed by Weijmar Schultz, a gynecologist at the

University Hospital of Groningen in The Netherlands. Now, my

wife and I have spent a good deal of time in Holland, especially

in Amsterdam, and the quite open sexual ambience is obvious, an

example being the famous red light districts. In fact, the first

time we happened through one, my wife insisted on going around

again, she was so fascinated by the artistic presentations of the

ladies of the evening in the windows of their places of business.

I, of course, had little interest in such matters.

But back to science. Should I have been surprised that Weijmar

Schultz had persuaded 8 couples to engage in sexual intercourse

for his study? Perhaps not, except for the venue chosen for the

acts, namely, an MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) machine. I

have had an MRI and personally find it difficult to imagine a

more uninspiring setting for a romantic tryst! Having gone this

far, I suppose I should tell you the results of this “basic science”

(Schultz”s quotes). He found that, for the conventional

“missionary” approach the male organ assumed the shape of a

boomerang, certainly a surprise to me! And, contradicting an

earlier study by Masters and Johnson, the size of the woman”s

uterus does not double in size but remains essentially constant

during the lovemaking. To tell the truth, I had not read M&J”s

work and the size of a woman”s uterus during sex was not one of

my major concerns. Weijmar assures us that this new knowledge

will help solve certain marital problems in the future.

After reading this item I thought to myself that I”d soon be

reading about studies of sex in space. It seems obvious that with

the proposed extended missions to Mars and mixed gender crews

the subject could arise. Would you believe that, only 10 pages

later in the same Discover issue, I came across an article titled

“No Space Sex?” This article did indeed indicate that NASA is

indeed concerned about “group living”, not only on trips to Mars

but on extended stays in the space station.

Back to Viagra, my first column dealt with the effects of the

resulting nitric oxide, NO, in the body. The NO promotes

dilation of the blood vessels and the resulting erectile event. In

some men, a side effect of taking Viagra is a headache. Of

course, turning the pages of my same Discover magazine, I

found an article on migraine, cluster and other severe headaches.

The article quoted the opinion that elucidation of the role of NO

is the most promising area of research for understanding these

headaches.

In my earlier column, I had noted that nitroglycerin relieves the

pain of angina through the release of NO and the dilation of the

blood vessels. The Discover article states that neurologists have

known for a long time that a common side effect in certain

patients is that, within 6 hours of taking the nitroglycerin, they

develop a migraine headache. Not only does the NO dilate the

blood vessels, but also it seems to be linked to the breakdown of

the compound serotonin in the brain. “So what?” you might say.

Well, it turns out that injections of other compounds that are

known to promote breakdown of serotonin have produced

migraines in subjects who had never had migraines before. Stay

tuned – NO obviously has many more tricks up its sleeve!

One more follow-up on an earlier topic (1/18/00). By the time

you read this, I”m sure most of you will have seen or heard about

the quark-gluon “soup” generated by a nuclear research group in

Switzerland. We have discussed how the fundamental particles

the proton and neutron really aren”t as fundamental as they used

to be, but are actually made up primarily of even smaller

particles, quarks and gluons. The gluons act sort of like rubber

bands to keep the quarks from flying out of the proton or

neutron. To illustrate the effect crudely, consider two oranges

(I”m in Florida). Now place a sturdy rubber band around them,

the rubber band being just big enough to slip around them

without stretching it. In this position, the band is not exerting

any force to keep the oranges together. Now try to pull the

oranges apart. The farther apart you pull the oranges, the

stronger the force of the rubber band trying to keep them

together. As I understand it, the gluons act in much the same

way, their force getting stronger as the quarks try to fly off from

each other in the proton or neutron. Without the gluons, my

guess is we never would hang together or even have been created

in the first place! You”ll never see a free quark; the force is so

strong.

However, physicists believe that there once was a time when

there were free quarks, if only for a mere fraction of a second.

This was less than a second after the Big Bang that started

everything, when for this briefest instant there was a “soup” of

quarks and gluons, with the quarks flitting around freely.

Quickly, the gluons kicked in and protons and neutrons were

formed. For years, some physicists have thought that if ever the

super high temperatures and densities of the Big Bang could be

achieved, this primordial quark-gluon soup could result. Now, a

group of researchers at CERN in Geneva claim to have done just

that.

If you were going to try to accomplish this amazing feat what

would you do? You probably would know that in the

accelerators around the world physicists shoot things at each

other or at targets at very high speeds and energies. If the

energies are high the temperatures at the point of collision are

also high so, to get super high temperatures, you want to get the

particles really revved up. Our friend Einstein told us we can”t

shoot them any faster than the speed of light so we should just try

to get as close as possible. Having solved that problem, what do

use as our particles? Remember we want to get a high density,

so we certainly wouldn”t want to use a hydrogen nucleus, with its

single proton. Instead we would want to use something with a

lot of protons and neutrons, that is something heavy. What”s a

heavy element? Lead is certainly the heaviest material that most

of us encounter.

Of course, you”ve guessed it. The CERN group fired beams of

lead nuclei chock full of quarks and gluons at speeds close to the

speed of light. What was their target? What else, a thin foil of

lead, also brimming with quarks and gluons. On slamming the

lead nuclei into the lead foil, a temperature reportedly 100,000

times that in the center of the sun was achieved, together with a

density 20 times that of ordinary nuclear matter. To carry out

this experiment they used their 4-mile around Super Proton

Synchrotron, an impressive machine. Did they actually see the

quark-gluon soup? No, they had to rely on the painstaking

analysis of the hosts of collisions and their byproducts from

several different experiments. From their analyses, and the

presence of certain types of particles not present in your typical

experiments, they concluded that they had indeed created the

soup, if only for a fleeting moment.

Likening the CERN experiments to obtaining a whiff of the soup,

sort of like a puff of steam, workers at Brookhaven National Lab

are gearing up to make a more tangible amount of quark-gluon

soup later this year. You can see they”re going first class.

Instead of lead, they”re going to shoot gold at gold at what they

expect to be ten times the energies of the CERN work. Again,

stay tuned. There”s more excitement on the way. To have even

thought about creating conditions approaching the Big Bang is

mind boggling enough to me.

Oh, by the way, speaking of my mind, my MRI was to see if my

brain was in good order. You might be surprised, after reading

some of these columns, that I was assured it was quite normal.

Allen F. Bortrum