Monday, August 22, 2011

Gravity Hills


I came to Silicon Valley in 1972. One thing I remember clearly up to these days is the visit of a place called "Mystery Spot" at Santa Cruz in 1973. It has been almost 40 years, I still remember seeing some strange things & phenomena in that place. However, I knew at that time, the whole thing was like a magic show. You were awed at what you saw & wondered how they could do things like that. The tour guide tried to convince the visitors it was all due to some magnetic field, some aliens from outer space buried heavy metals beneath or some unknown force around this mysterious spot. But deep down, you knew it was like a magic show, a full show of illusion & entertainment. The place is still open today. One thing different is that with the advancement of science, they throw in some new terms like Dark Matter, Dark Energy, Torsion Field to impress the visitors. Fortunately they haven't got the Lee's gospel of "信息場". The whole scenario was interesting that I describe in the next paragraph.

In some weekend, nice & sunny, you longed for a relax afternoon & drove to Santa Cruz. After a nice lunch, sightseeing the wavy coast & some begonia garden, you came to a shop ordering some beer to quench your thirst. After that, you still got some time to kill. Ah, you noticed the board nearby enticing you to visit the "Mystery Spot". What a nice idea this was. You hopped into your car & drove to the spot. A tour guide greeted you in front of the entrance friendly. Within a few minutes, several other couples with kids joined you. The guide then briefed us this mystery spot, its history & super-natural event was going to happen. We were guided to walk in a narrow path, the slope is so tiny you didn't notice it. Meanwhile, you saw two rows of junipers or some pine trees grown along the path. Here the poem of 李白 applies " 綠竹入幽徑,青籮拂行衣". Pretty soon, you were in front of a little house with a capacity of 20 people. By this time, you were so relax & also with the help of beer drank before, you were ready to believe whatever the guide told you. Inside this little room, with window of course, the guide showed you all bunch of strange phenomena about gravity that included water flowing from low spot to high place. Also a guided marble moved from low-left corner of the window toward high-right corner. All kids were marveled at what they saw & parents awed with their eyes wide open. Whole thing was very magical & entertaining. Of course the guide showed us other attractions & spent a lot of time to emphasize the mysterious & super natural field around the spot not yet discovered yet by science. Time went fast while you had a good time. After one & half hour, you found that you were in front of the entrance again. All visitors were happy & believed what the guide had said. At this time, the poem of 李白 applies again "我醉君復樂,陶然共忘机". You totally forgot you were a "台大電机系高材生".

I found it educational, because I thought I knew all the tricks & the truth. Here is the trick. While you were guided into the narrow path, you actually walked into a slightly uphill slope that you didn't notice. The trees planted along the path were not vertical to the earth surface (horizontal plane). Instead it is perpendicular to the hill. It gave you the feeling you were not walking on the slope. The little house was built the same way, perpendicular to the hill. So when you were in front the house, you were already tricked into thinking you are leveled with the earth gravity. The angle of the slope was big enough to perform the tricks, but small enough for you not to sense you were actually on the slope. Here is the lesson, our eyes & ears are not good enough under certain circumstances like the one I just described. The figure 1 shows actual plan you are in. The figure 2 shows the plan you think you are in. You think point 'a' is the same level of point 'b' & so point c is lower than 'a'. Actually point 'c' is the same height as point 'a'. So if you pick any point d between b & c, the water will flow from d to a (since d>c & c=a). But you still think b is the same height as a & b higher than d, so a is higher than d or d is lower than a, ie water flows from low to high.

Now we go back to this Magnetic Hill in Canada. I visited Montreal, Quebec & the surrounding area 15 years ago. I heard this Magnetic Hill of Moncton. But I figured this had to be something like Mystery Spot in Santa Cruz. I rather stayed & spent the time walking around the Plains of Abraham in Quebec. This was the battle field between James Wolfe & Louis de Montcalm in 1759. The battle of Quebec was the turning point of the history. Since then, French were driven out of North America & it led to American Revolution indirectly. Quebec is the only walled city in America. The wall is well kept but not that impressive comparing to China's Great Wall. Both Wolfe & Montcalm died in this battle. There is an obelisk below the fortress near St. Lawrence River commemorating both of them.

I think the whole scenario of Magnetic Hill is similar to the Mystery Spot except that the little house becomes a long hilly pavement. In order to demo it well, I add figure 3 & 4 to show the possible plan of the situation. The road can be separated in three sections with three different slopes. The slopes are possibly all uphills with the middle slope less hilly.

Here comes the interesting part when we look at the website of 林星雄(LSH). Per his own description, he is 1963 NTUEE graduate, one year senior to us. His career & track record are impressive. However, in this matter of Magnetic Hill, he seems way off the tangent of normal engineering thinking. I know we studied General Physics from 許照 & Applied Mechanics from 翁通楹. Since I don't know the whereabouts of 許照, perhaps we should just visit 翁通楹 (台北市青田街) to see what he says. He may ask you whether you believe what the website says. If you say yes, I bet 9 out of 10, he will kick you out & says, "How could you believe such a thing?" First he (LSH) believes what he saw but not simple instruments like Bubble Leveling or plumbing lines. He perhaps forgot his ears (crude leveling device). Since he trusts his eyes but not the simple instruments & forgets his ears, he can't explain the strange phenomena of Magnetic Hill. He has to elicit the help of Dark Matter, Dark Energy or String Theory, M-Theory, Universal Hidden Dimension, Parallel Universe etc. I think these are all unnecessary red herrings (misleading clues). The phenomena is really easy to explain with the Newton's Theory. The trick from LSH is that he doesn't trust the instruments because he argued that the instruments are also affected by those Dark Matter or horizontal gravity stuffs. In other words, he wants you to prove there is nothing like dark matter, hidden dimension or horizontal gravity exist. But isn't it true that the burden of proof is on him since he claims all these wield stuffs have something to do with the Magnetic Hill? LSH trusts his eyes but his argument of point 'L' is lower than point 'S' is not all that convincing.

I add Figure 3 & 4 that may depict the scenario of the Magnetic Hill. The actual terrain is as Figure 3 shows & Figure 4 is the road people think they are in. They think L is the lowest point on the road but actually as Figure 3 shows it is actually higher than the starting point S. The trick is that the guide tells you to proceed or drive down to the lowest point L. They never says to coast down (with neutral transmission) to point L. I bet you will never be successful by coasting down to L as the case of bicycle & horse carriage experienced uphills described in the website. It seems an independent test from GPS should resolve the problem. Unfortunately, even the newest GPS is not accurately enough to a few feet of R coordinate. If a modern geographer can measure Himalayas raises its peak 2.4 inches every year, why can't they measure the exact geographical location to a few inch accuracy? I think we have the technology to do it. But since nobody is serious enough to tackle this kind of magic show problem, it is just not worthwhile spending the time & money on the illusion of Gravity Hills. If there are people still thinking the whole thing have something to do with some horizontal gravity field around the mysterious spot, I will tell them the following: Give me enough money, I can create something similar anywhere in the world (except oceans where people can detect the real horizontal plane right away). As a matter of fact, if our classmates would like to build one in Taiwan, we can make it happen & may make money from it since we haven't heard anything like it in Taiwan.

One easy way to prove the point 'S' actually is lower than point 'L' is the following as shown in Figure 3 (in green color):

1. At point S & L, use water bubble to find horizon & raise a pole of 12 meters high.
2. Pick a point of 8 meters from the pole base of S & shoot a green laser beam to 'D' of Pole L. Green laser has more range & better quality for this purpose. Just be sure the laser beam is parallel to the horizon.
3. Measure the distance (D) from the laser beam on Pole L to its base.
4. If D>8 meters, it means L is lower than S. Otherwise L is higher than S.

I agree with AhMo on his statement: They are all TRIVIAL in principle but can be highly bewildering and entertaining in practice. This is the postscript. I just wonder perhaps there are some inherent problems in our NTUEE education. We have prof Lee & now we have LSH. They are all brilliant in their field & yet get side tracked to pursue something phantom & mysterious. Finally I heard that 李家同 is our another controversial NTUEE graduate, 1961. I have no comment on him as I know very little about him.

ps: You can expand the figures to see them in details.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Bicentennial of Franz Liszt

Liszt was born in 1811, one year after the birth of Robert Schumann and Frederic Chopin. This is the reason why very often we see three of them show up in the same movie. Liszt was born in Hungary with German ancestry. He was a child prodigy in his early life. He appeared in concerts at age 9. After the concerts, a group of wealthy sponsors offered to finance Franz's musical education abroad. He was a terrific piano virtuoso & considered perhaps the greatest pianist in history. His greatest contribution is the creation of Symphonic Poem. Haydn composed 104 symphonies & earned titles of "Father of Symphony" & "PaPa Haydn". The Haydn's symphony is a form of four movements. It always begins with an Introduction lasted about 2 minutes & followed with a main theme. The 2nd movement is always slow & the 3rd movement is always a Minuet (小步舞曲). The 4th movement is usually fast & lively. Later composers followed this format closely with some adjustment as needed. For example, Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony has five movements, Mozart's Prague Symphony has three movements & Schubert's symphony #8 has only two movements as it is "Unfinished". Beethoven very often replaced Minuet with Scherzo (詼諧曲). However, Liszt was the one who collapsed the four movements into one & called it Symphonic Poem (交响詩). He created a new form that he could combine literature, painting & music in one pot. The new style enabled him to express the feeling & emotion much more freely. He composed twelve Symphonic Poems. The most famous one is the #3, "Les Preludes (前奏曲)". It is based on Ode of Alphonse de Lamartine's Nouvelles meditations poetiques (拉馬丁的'詩的沈思錄').

Liszt was one of the most generous composers in the 19th century. He had the look & talent that attracted a lot of women. He was successful in career early enough that free him from insecurity, anxiety & jealousy of others. He gave helps to Schumann, Brahms, Chopin, Berlioz & even Wagner. The following is a legendary story. Liszt once traveled to a little town near Budapest. He checked in a tavern & saw one notice in the lobby. It stated "A Piano Concert will be performed this evening at 8 pm by XXX (female name), a student of Franz Liszt". Since Liszt couldn't figure out who she was, he went to knock her door. You can imagine what happened after that. This pianist was shocked to see Liszt standing in front of him. She begged his pardon. Liszt comforted her & led her to the piano. He told her to play "Hungarian Rhapsody #2", one of the piece in the evening concert. She played (誠惶誠恐地) and Liszt offered some suggestions. After 15 minutes, Liszt stood up and said to her, "Don't worry, now you are my student". The pianist was so moved that she cried uncontrollably. The story ends here. We don't know whether Liszt invited her to dinner or went to her concert. This is indeed a heart-warming story. It gives you some idea how gracious and generous Liszt was in his time.

There is a movie "Song Without End" which was released in 1960, our Freshmen days. I went to see this movie in Taipei. The cinematography is fantastic. It was shot by 黄宗沾 (James Wong Howe), a famous Chinese photographer in Hollywood. The movie portrays the life of Liszt and his love affairs with Countess Marie d'Agoult and Russian Princess Carolyn. Liszt was once considered a womanizer. Marie d'Agoult abandoned her husband & eloped with Liszt. She bore three daughters for him. Ironically, one of Liszt's daughter Cosima later eloped with Richard Wagner without permission from Liszt. Now you know how romantic people were in that Romantic Era.

One of Liszt's famous piece is Liebestraume (Dreams of Love), very very dream like romantic piece.

The music is based on the poem "Love as long as you can!" by Ferdinand Freiligrath. The lyrics is something like the following:
愛之夢,奇妙心声... 愛之夢,柔情蜜意...
愛之夢,温馨纏綿... 愛之夢,歡樂無窮...
愛之夢,幸福充盈... 愛之夢,綿延永遠...

Another Liszt's famous piece is Hungarian Rhapsody #2.

This rhapsody is a typical Hungarian folk dance Csardas. It usually consists of two parts, one slow "Lassu" section followed with a fast "Friss" section in dance form. I found a video clip of Csardas in the next link. Although the music is not composed by Liszt, it shows you how a typical Csardas looks like. The dance was performed in the Imperial Hofburg from Vienna. Thanks to Andre Rieu. If you are interested, the music is "Komm, Zigany (Come, Gypsy)" from operetta Grafin Mariza composed by another Hungarian, Emmerich Kalman.

It should be noted that while Liszt is famous for his Hungarian Rhapsodies, Brahms is the king of Hungarian Dances. Brahms composed 21 dances based on Hungarian folk tunes with #5 the most popular.

The last video clip is from the movie "Song of Love". This is the beginning part of the movie. Clara Schumann played the famous Piano Concerto #1 by Liszt. She played the 1st movement & switched to 4th movement. Usually a typical concerto has three movements. Here Liszt got away with four movements and played without pause or interruption between movements, unconventional. If you are popular and talented like Liszt, you can do whatever you like.


0:00 - 3:02: 1st movement, heavy & forceful
3:02 - 4:01: near the end of 3rd movement
4:03 - 4:17: The person sat behind the king was Franz Liszt.
4:02 - 6:24: 4th movement, lively & brilliant
5:10 - 5:18: The person sat beside Clara was her father Friedrich Wieck.

Note: Due to copyright issue on YouTube, the above link is no longer available.  However, you probably can check out the DVD from Netflix.

Here is another legendary story. Liszt put words to the opening measures purposely. The first two measures sounds like "Das versteht ihr alle nicht, haha!". Translated into English is "None of you understand this, HaHa!'. 0:38- 0:42 is the first two measures. It repeats once at 0:43-0.48. I was in Davies Symphony Hall of San Francisco last October. They performed this masterpiece with pianist & full orchestra. With its acoustics & subtle echo of the hall, I heard something like "You don't know what this is, HaHa!". Listen carefully, you will know what I mean.