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Billionaire Technologist Accuses NASA Asteroid Mission of Bad Statistics (sciencemag.org) 207

Taco Cowboy quotes a report from Science Magazine: Nathan Myhrvold, ex-CTO of Microsoft, is accusing NASA of providing bad statistics on asteroid size. Mr. Myhrvold alleged that scientists using a prominent NASA space telescope have made fundamental mistakes in their assessment of the size of more than 157,000 asteroids they have observed. In a paper posted to the arXiv.org e-print repository on 22 May, Myhrvold takes aim at the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), a space telescope launched in 2009, and a follow-on mission, NEOWISE, which together are responsible for the discovery of more asteroids than any other observatory. Yet Myhrvold says that the WISE and NEOWISE teams' papers are riddled with statistical missteps. "None of their results can be replicated," he tells ScienceInsider. "I found one irregularity after another" Myhrvold says the NASA teams have made mistakes, such as ignoring the margin of error introduced when extrapolating from a small sample size to an entire population. They also neglected to include Kirchhoff's law of thermal radiation in their thermal models of the asteroids. Based on his own models, Myhrvold says that errors in the asteroid diameters based on WISE data should be 30%. In some cases, the size errors rise to as large as 300%. "Asteroids are more variable than we thought they were," he says. He has submitted the paper to the journal Icarus for review. However, the WISE and NEOWISE teams are standing by their results, and say that Myhrvold's criticism should be dismissed. "For every mistake I found in his paper, if I got a bounty, I would be rich," says Ned Wright, the principal investigator for WISE at the University of California, Los Angeles. Wright says that WISE's data match very well with two other infrared telescopes, AKARI and IRAS. To find out how accurately those infrared data determine the size of an asteroid, scientists have to calibrate them with radar observations, other observations made when asteroids pass in front of distant stars, and observations made by spacecraft up close. When they do that, Wright says, WISE's size errors end up at roughly 15%. Wright says his team doesn't have Myhrvold's computer codes, "so we don't know why he's screwing up." But Wright archly noted that Myhrvold once worked at Microsoft, so "is responsible in part for a lot of bad software."
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Billionaire Technologist Accuses NASA Asteroid Mission of Bad Statistics

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  • Myhrvold? (Score:4, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @06:05AM (#52177329)

    Isn't that this patent troll [wikipedia.org]?

    • Re:Myhrvold? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by JustBoo ( 4351021 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @09:13AM (#52177903)

      Isn't that this patent troll [wikipedia.org]?

      Yes, he turned to the Dark Side. I have nothing but revulsion for the disgusting douche that Myhrvold has become.

      There is a lot of misinformation below. Myhrvold was, in fact, a huge part of the development of the Win32 API, essentially the architect. Win32 is and was Windows. I understand he also pushed to have that little code snippet at the bottom of all the official API documentation that was shipped with many MS products and more. That documentation ended up in all kids of things including the Borland C++ compiler, competing products, et cetera. Anyone old enough to remember what developing professionally for Windows was like in the early nineties should remember how helpful Win32 and that documentation was.

      Apparently working for and observing uber-douches like Gates and Ballmer convinced Myhrvold to become a true Piece of Shit(r)(c) bad human being and go the route of a revolting Patent Troll, one of the worst. I used to practically worship the guy, his work, and his story. That old saying of "never meet your heroes" is oh so true. I wish nothing but the worst for what he is now, a complete failure, in every sense of the word. He is such a fool now, he is doing low-life crap like this article recounts. Pathetic.

    • by Thud457 ( 234763 )
      Oh god, another nerd on the internet that thinks he's an expert on everything!
  • Ouch! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by PvtVoid ( 1252388 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @06:08AM (#52177335)

    But Wright archly noted that Myhrvold once worked at Microsoft, so "is responsible in part for a lot of bad software."

    That hurts.

    Here's a link to the paper [arxiv.org]. Seriously, does this guy think the WISE team are a bunch of idiots? I'm personally not qualfied to judge the details of the physical arguments in Myhrvold's paper, but I would give it high probability that he's full of shit.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I think we're witnessing a new class of rich assholes who think they're superman or something. Where money is a substitute for intellect, beauty or inspiration.

      Disgusting, but also scary. A danger to society as a whole.

      Watch them meeting at Davos to "solve the big problems of humankind". Barf.

      • by haruchai ( 17472 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @06:58AM (#52177431)

        " we're witnessing a new class of rich assholes who think they're superman or something"
        er, no, that class is as old as civilization. We used to call them kings or lords.

        • by Evtim ( 1022085 )

          Well, the role models have somewhat changed....I personally blame Marvel and R.D. Junior [wink:)] - now every rich guy thinks he is Tony Stark.

          How did it go - "Genius, billionaire, playboy, philanthropist" Yhea, right....

        • I think we need to call them sociopaths.

        • by tnk1 ( 899206 )

          No, Kings and Lords were a lot more honest than that at the beginning. They were warriors and warlords. Only later did they get on the pretense bandwagon about the Divine Right of Kings and that twaddle because civilization had rendered their services obsolete and they needed to justify their palaces, mistresses and gold-plated everything.

          What you are seeing in this article is what is known as a rich dilettante, which is a fairly old trope as well. They're just getting more press now.

      • This guy started college at age 14, has a PhD in theoretical and mathematical physics from Princeton and held a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Cambridge working under Stephen Hawking.
        • by mbone ( 558574 )

          Maybe so, but he wrote a really crappy asteroid paper.

          • Maybe so, but he wrote a really crappy asteroid paper.

            You're missing the Long Play. In about 12 months, Intellectual Ventures is going to sue Atari for all profits from the game Asteroids.

            Mark your calendars.

      • by fsagx ( 1936954 )

        I think we're witnessing a new class of rich assholes who think they're superman or something.

        Not Superman. Maybe he's trying for Tony Stark. The closer (though obscure) parallel that came to mind was the wealthy industrialist Tim Hamner from the novel Lucifer's Hammer [wikipedia.org].

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Sure it isn't arxiv.org [arxiv.org]?

    • Re:Ouch! (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @07:11AM (#52177465)

      It's also a cheap-shot that has nothing to do with the topic. An ad hominem if there ever was one. I admit it's a tempting one, but it's not very classy, and ultimately contra productive. He should stick to the science, stuff like this makes it look like Myhrvold is on to something.

      • It's also a cheap-shot that has nothing to do with the topic. An ad hominem if there ever was one. I admit it's a tempting one, but it's not very classy, and ultimately contra productive. He should stick to the science, stuff like this makes it look like Myhrvold is on to something.

        Nothing says you can't top off your substantive criticism with a bit of style.

        Myhrvold is undeniably a smart guy, but that doesn't make him immune from doing something stupid. He's basically claiming that in his spare time he created a better model than a dedicated group at NASA and has found errors throughout their published work.

        Now that's possible, NASA employs humans and humans sometimes screw up, but for him to be right a lot of different people and groups need to have screwed up together, for him to b

    • Not only does having untold millions in your bank account (actually generated by your rank and file) make you a permanent money addict, searching for another hit that felt as good as that first million, but it also warps your mind to such a degree that you think you're an all-knowing, all-seeing demigod (see: Koch Brothers, Sheldon Adelson, etc.).
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Nemyst ( 1383049 )
      On the other hand, Myhrvold made verifiable claims and corrections, whereas the NASA guys basically just went full ad hominem. I can't say who's right either, but I think NASA is showing a serious lack of professionalism. Shit happens, and yes, it's possible that someone outside the inner circle calls you up on it.
      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        Did you miss the part where he says WISE estimates agree with radar measurements much better than Myhrvold predicts they should? It's in the summary....

      • Re:Ouch! (Score:5, Informative)

        by XXongo ( 3986865 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @10:19AM (#52178257) Homepage

        On the other hand, Myhrvold made verifiable claims and corrections, whereas the NASA guys basically just went full ad hominem.

        1. The NASA WISE team released all their data to the public, and publish their results in peer-reviewed journals. The whole reason he can do this analysis is because they are open with the data. I think it's a little disingenuous to say that they don't make "verifiable claims and corrections."

        On the other hand, Myhrvold has not made verifiable claims, and hasn't published in peer-reviewed journals. He says he's done a reanalysis, but according to the article: "Wright says his team doesn’t have Myhrvold’s computer codes, “so we don’t know why he’s screwing up.”

        2. What NASA guys are "basically full ad hominem"? In the article cited, there was one-- count it, one-- snarky comment. Which I think was deserved.

        I can't say who's right either, but I think NASA is showing a serious lack of professionalism.

        You know, sometimes you get tired of people who basically don't seem to know anything about a subject telling you that you are completely wrong and don't know what you're doing. One guy made one snarky comment. Give them a little slack, "NASA guys" are human, too.

        Shit happens, and yes, it's possible that someone outside the inner circle calls you up on it.

        And crackpots happen, and yes, it's possible that somebody who is completely full of confidence but doesn't really know the field and has never done this kind of analysis before is full of s**t.

        • doesn't really know the field and has never done this kind of analysis before is full of s**t.

          He has a Phd in the subject from Princeton and worked under Stephen Hawking.

          • Which doesn't mean his analysis is correct. As it is no one has actually seen the full analysis, and what's more NASA has confirmation from other data sources which thus far he has not actually been able to explain away.

          • by mbone ( 558574 )

            He has never worked in this field, and (much more importantly) this paper is not standing up to scrutiny.

            There is also the little detail he used his wealth and PR machinery to get this basically published in the New York Times, instead of sending it to a journal or at least a few researchers in the field for comments first.

            In fact, from reading it, I doubt anyone reviewed it for him before he posted it who has the guts to tell him "no." That happens a lot with billionaires, which is exactly why they shoul

          • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

            it's possible that somebody who is completely full of confidence but doesn't really know the field and has never done this kind of analysis before is full of s**t.

            He has a Phd in the subject from Princeton and worked under Stephen Hawking.

            To my knowledge, Stephen Hawking has never worked on asteroids, nor for that matter, done any observational astronomy whatsoever.

            • Statistics knows no limitations. He has found statistics errors in paleontology science papers that have led to retraction and that is further away than the field of asteroids. Isn't everybody supposed to be questioning science? Isn't that how it works as opposed to religion?
          • by gtall ( 79522 )

            You are aware that Physics is a very, very large field and being an expert on the narrow subject that got him a PhD doesn't make him an expert on most other areas, yes?

            • You can still find math errors.

              I really don't get the hate on this guy. This is supposed to be how science works. He found statistics errors before in science papers that have led to retractions.

    • by DrXym ( 126579 )

      That hurts.

      It shouldn't because it's a form of ad hominem attack. It's one thing to criticize his analysis and say it sucks for stated reasons A, B and C. It's another to imply it sucks because he used to work for Microsoft.

    • by lucm ( 889690 )

      Seriously, does this guy think the WISE team are a bunch of idiots? I'm personally not qualfied to judge the details of the physical arguments in Myhrvold's paper, but I would give it high probability that he's full of shit.

      And your opinion is based on what? The moral and intellectual superiority of NASA?

      There's a reason why people go to the former USSR to launch private space ships and satellites. And it's not that the NASA is amazingly good and flexible and cost-effective. They are the DMV of space, with the same arrogance based on state-backed authority, not competence.

      Just looking at how the WISE people answer to his critics show that they're not used to have people challenge them, and just based on that I'd bet a dollar a

      • Re:Ouch! (Score:5, Informative)

        by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @09:09AM (#52177885)

        There's a reason why people go to the former USSR to launch private space ships and satellites. And it's not that the NASA is amazingly good and flexible and cost-effective.

        No, it's because of International Launch Services. Note also that NASA is NOT a launch service (or at least isn't since mid-1980s), making this line of reasoning entirely nonsensical.

      • Re:Ouch! (Score:5, Informative)

        by mbone ( 558574 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @11:36AM (#52178835)

        And your opinion is based on what? The moral and intellectual superiority of NASA?

        Well, let's see. I work in asteroids, I know the WISE team, I have read their papers, and I think their response is quite reasonable. The WISE work has been compared to other data by a whole bunch of people (both professionals and amateurs - the amateur community makes a strong contribution to asteroid research). This is not a static thing - there are radar and stellar occultation observations of "new" asteroids on almost a weekly basis. These are routinely compared to the WISE results, and to other NEATM results. This is a very active field, and no one group dominates it.

        I have criticized certain areas of asteroid research, but if some outsider comes in saying "you're doing it all wrong," does not appear to be up on the literature, and makes a variety of basic mistakes in their paper, I would not bet on the outsider.

    • by mbone ( 558574 )

      Seriously, does this guy think the WISE team are a bunch of idiots? I'm personally not qualified to judge the details of the physical arguments in Myhrvold's paper, but I would give it high probability that he's full of shit.

      I am, and you are correct.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @06:16AM (#52177347)

    The worst kind of data problem is when the data appear reasonable enough to not trigger suspicions but are actually dead wrong. I've been there, where I had a result that looked reasonable enough that I presented it at a conference. I later discovered that the result was wrong enough to invalidate anything I had presented. The problem was a software package I was using, a programming and data analysis tool called NCL. Had a function worked as documented and in the examples on the website, my results would have been fine. But because of the bug in NCL that probably still hasn't been fixed, my results looked reasonable enough but we're wrong. Thankfully I discovered the problem before trying to publish the results.

    NASA says their results look reasonable. However, if their methodology has errors, it might be a case of reasonable looking results that are wrong. I think it would be worthwhile to look into the concerns and see if any of them have merit.

    The last statement in the summary is completely uncalled for. The ad hominem attack does nothing to defend NASA's methodology. It only serves to try to discredit the criticism. That's the biggest thing I have a problem with. If you're convinced the methodology is correct and that the concerns are unfounded, that's enough to fend off the criticism. That the critic was once an executive at Microsoft is totally irrelevant.

    • by Cytotoxic ( 245301 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @06:54AM (#52177415)

      The last statement in the summary is completely uncalled for. The ad hominem attack does nothing to defend NASA's methodology. It only serves to try to discredit the criticism. That's the biggest thing I have a problem with. If you're convinced the methodology is correct and that the concerns are unfounded, that's enough to fend off the criticism. That the critic was once an executive at Microsoft is totally irrelevant.

      That's what I was coming to post. The personal vitriol was weird - particularly in public statements. That kind of talk is usually reserved for serial offenders - people like Peter Duesberg (AIDS denial) or Andrew Wakefield (anti-vaxxer) who ignore all data and plow ahead with dangerous opinions, tarnishing the academy and harming people in the process. And even then that sort of talk is reserved until much back and forth in the professional arena.

      • by PvtVoid ( 1252388 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @07:52AM (#52177573)

        The last statement in the summary is completely uncalled for.

        Ned Wright is known to have a pretty sharp wit. Besides, Myhrvold used his notoriety to grandstand with the press before his work was peer-reviewed, basically calling Wright a moron. I would get a little testy too.

        • by phayes ( 202222 )

          The last statement in the summary is completely uncalled for.

          Ned Wright is known to have a pretty sharp wit. Besides, Myhrvold used his notoriety to grandstand with the press before his work was peer-reviewed, basically calling Wright a moron. I would get a little testy too.

          Sorry, I disagree. Wright clearly wasn't displaying sharp wit to use a grade-school Ad Hominim instead of pointing out factual errors. Scientists have always attacked each others data and findings with grand standing and mockery but what matters is whether the attacks are valid and not whether it was done nicely.

          Myhrvold comes off as the better scientist so far.

          • Based on the slashdot summary? Maybe dig a bit deeper. Scientists can be proud and rash, but it is likely backed by mountains of data.
        • by fsagx ( 1936954 )

          The last statement in the summary is completely uncalled for.

          Ned Wright is known to have a pretty sharp wit. Besides, Myhrvold used his notoriety to grandstand with the press before his work was peer-reviewed, basically calling Wright a moron. I would get a little testy too.

          If Myhrvold wants to play the YOU-ARE-NOT-CREDIBLE-BECAUSE-YOUR-ORGANIZATION-MAKES-BAD-SOFTWARE game, he need only mention Mars Climate Orbiter [wikipedia.org]. Oops! See how that works?

          Not to mention Spaceport Command and Control System (SCCS) [nasawatch.com] Doh!

    • by plover ( 150551 )

      Wouldn't that be some beautiful irony, if the NASA research was wrong because of a bug in software Myhrvold's company had a hand in developing?

      • by starless ( 60879 )

        Wouldn't that be some beautiful irony, if the NASA research was wrong because of a bug in software Myhrvold's company had a hand in developing?

        Except 99% of physicists and astronomers use MacOS and/or some flavor of Linux....

    • by bigpat ( 158134 )

      The last statement in the summary is completely uncalled for. The ad hominem attack does nothing to defend NASA's methodology. It only serves to try to discredit the criticism. That's the biggest thing I have a problem with. If you're convinced the methodology is correct and that the concerns are unfounded, that's enough to fend off the criticism. That the critic was once an executive at Microsoft is totally irrelevant.

      I agree. Or usually I agree. In this case the ad hominem comes after the criticism has already been discredited.

    • by aepervius ( 535155 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @08:45AM (#52177763)
      He has not published his alogorithm source code or calculation so the same apply to that guy. On the other hand result in agreement with other telescope and experiment give some more surety. So we have 3 results similar and 1 guy which makes some calculation and tell us they are all 3 wrong in effect and riddled of error " Yet Myhrvold says that the WISE and NEOWISE teams' papers are riddled with statistical missteps" "fundemental mistake" so excuse me if I pardon the "he made bad software".
    • The problem was a software package I was using, a programming and data analysis tool called NCL. Had a function worked as documented and in the examples on the website, my results would have been fine. But because of the bug in NCL that probably still hasn't been fixed, my results looked reasonable enough but we're wrong. Thankfully I discovered the problem before trying to publish the results.

      A great example for why writing your own code may be a good idea. Or validating it against other results (using multiple packages, preferably?). Or alternatively, validating those other results with your own code. There's an old maxim that says something along the lines of "First you make it compile. Then you fix the cases when it fails at runtime. Then you fix the cases where the results are obviously wrong. Then you get results that 'look good'...and this is the time when you should get really frightened.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Of course people make mistakes. But ultimately the only thing you can do with a result you think you've validated statistically is compare it to other data. In other words data "seeming reasonable" is an end point you have to reach; but while that is necessary, it's not sufficient. And you can never know with absolute certainty it's sufficient.

      Now the other problem is that the world is full of scientific crackpots who demand that scientists stop what they're doing and pick sense out of their nonsense. And

  • This guy... (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @06:18AM (#52177357)

    He has also attacked other researchers in other fields: http://mobile.nytimes.com/2013/12/17/science/earth/outsider-challenges-papers-on-growth-of-dinosaurs.html

    Shame he's been unable to locate the stick lodged in his butt.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Well, he's patented a "Method For Locating A Stick Lodged In One's Butt", but unfortunately he sues everyone who tries to use the method, including himself.

  • by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @06:43AM (#52177399) Homepage

    Nathan only got his billions by riding the coat tails of Bill. he did nothing at all that was impressive, and honestly from insight read online during those yearst he CTO was not as competent as he should have been.

    Bored Billionaire wants attention, attacks real scientists with pseudoscience, news at a11.

    Now if he actually give them ALL the information including his Excel spreadsheet.... I mean software.... then we can start to take him serious.

    • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

      He was responsible technically for HPFS, a colossal failure. He also did work in photography where he showed the same poor insights technically as non-technical photographers often do. He clearly has a huge ego and the ability to fool people; what beyond that is hard to say. Not impressed.

    • by konohitowa ( 220547 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @07:49AM (#52177559) Journal

      Bored Billionaire wants attention, attacks real scientists with pseudoscience, news at a11.

      From his wikipedia page:

      Myhrvold was born in Seattle, Washington. He attended Mirman School,[4] and began college at age 14.[5] He studied mathematics, geophysics, and space physics at UCLA (BSc, Masters). He was awarded a Hertz Foundation Fellowship for graduate study and studied at Princeton University, where he earned a master's degree in mathematical economics and completed a PhD in theoretical and mathematical physics.[6] He also attended Santa Monica College. For one year, he held a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Cambridge working under Stephen Hawking (along with a number of other students).

      • College at 14 I didn't start until I was 17 personally I think 16 should be the earliest.

        • I think College Admission/Voting/Drinking Age should match. I love how you are "too immature" to make reasonable life choices about drinking at an age you are making many life altering decisions. I finished my first semester of college at the age of 17.

          • It's not just college you can join the armed services and die for your country prior to being drinking age.

            I started my first semester of college mid-year just before my 18th birthday and missed my high school prom and graduation. Much later I went back to school and was older and more experienced than many of my professors. Just wait until I retire and go back again.

      • I was wondering when someone would start to look for facts rather than making up and then beating a fake and simplistic bad-guy. I have no use at all for patent trolling and believe the law is badly overdue for major reform, but that doesn't change the fact that Myhrvold has a ridiculously long list of real accomplishments. My impression is that whatever he does, he does at a world class level. Of all the people who practice patent harvesting, he is the single one I would seriously want to have a conver
        • by eyenot ( 102141 )

          As abusive as the patent office of their own system, personally I find it hard to have qualms with people who abuse the patent office in turn.

          Any ways, Myhrvold seems kind of egg-headed to me. See you got your academics, and then you got your jaded academics who spring off into being intellectual-tower types. And if they spend enough time in their intellectual tower, recursively they become egg-heads in their own little world.

          Myrhvold strikes me as somebody who picks his pet theories and in the case of NEO

  • Wright says his team doesn't have Myhrvold's computer codes, "so we don't know why he's screwing up." But Wright archly noted that Myhrvold once worked at Microsoft, so "is responsible in part for a lot of bad software."

    See, now this is something that would be fun to watch.

  • Do we find the science too complicated? Too busy to actually read the papers? Too lazy to do a little digging? Never learned how to do the math? Never mind. We can always pick a side and run down the character of any and all opponents. It's quick. It's easy. It's fun. Science be damned.
    • by PvtVoid ( 1252388 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @07:16AM (#52177473)

      Do we find the science too complicated? Too busy to actually read the papers? Too lazy to do a little digging? Never learned how to do the math? Never mind. We can always pick a side and run down the character of any and all opponents. It's quick. It's easy. It's fun. Science be damned.

      Oh, please.

      None of us, even the most scientifically sophisticated, is capable of developing sufficient expertise in every field in order to personally judge the scientific merits of technical arguments in highly specialized fields. Maybe one or two such fields, if we work very hard on it. This is why we rely on the opinions of experts. Putting every random crackpot who advances an argument on the same footing as established scientists in the field is false equivalence. Yes, every once in a great while, an outsider can point out an error being made by subject experts. But, 99.999% of the time, they're full of shit. The burden of proof here is on Myhrvold.

      • by cdrudge ( 68377 )

        The burden of proof here is on Myhrvold.

        The burden of proof here is on both sides.

        Oversimplified, this is why your math and science teachers always told you to show your work. It's so that if there is a discrepancy in the final result, things can be compared, see what assumptions were made if any, and determine where the differences are at.

      • by pr0t0 ( 216378 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @07:52AM (#52177571)

        It reminds of the time Tom Cruise told Matt Lauer that "There is no such thing as a chemical imbalance in the body." [washingtonpost.com], and "You don't know the history of psychiatry, I do.".

        The overpaid and entitled, with a pulpit to stand on and a microphone in front of them, will always feel the need to speak from a position of equal parts confidence and ignorance.

      • Take a look at Myhrvold's history before you go out on that limb.
  • by halivar ( 535827 ) <bfelger&gmail,com> on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @08:01AM (#52177605)

    It's not rocket science, people.

    Oh, wait...

  • NASA is talking about (and might eventually maybe do) a mission where they go grab ONE asteroid and bring it back. Once they find a few candidates, they will obviously have to send robot probes to the candidates for a close examination. No way to do it by telescope, before you ever try to move an asteroid you need to see it at extremely close range to see it's true composition, look for cracks, etc.

    Then they have some plan to send a robot spacecraft with a shit-ton of dV to bring it back. (and so they ne

    • by starless ( 60879 )

      Just because you can rendezvous/retrieve one (or even a few) small asteroids, you still want to know the overall population statistics. i.e. how many of what size in what orbits etc.

    • by mbone ( 558574 )

      Well, suppose you find an asteroid that is on a collision for the Earth. Is it 10 meters (probably not a problem) or 100 meters (a city buster) or 1 km (uh oh, we're in deep trouble) in diameter? You need a statistical means of determining its size to determine how much of a threat it could be, and a lot could be riding on the accuracy of that determination.

  • by Tom ( 822 )

    But Wright archly noted that Myhrvold once worked at Microsoft, so "is responsible in part for a lot of bad software."

    There was a time when Microsoft was in the IBM "no one ever got fired for buying..." position.

    Now we have statements like this in (more or less) mainstream press, not just techie circles. That's a long way to fall, when having Microsoft on your CV is held against you.

  • by Rob Bos ( 3399 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @10:28AM (#52178299) Homepage

    Well, that's how the scientific process works. It's not pretty sometimes, but finding a mistake in someone else's work is how we progress. Sometimes people are dicks about it, or refuse to admit their own error.

    Get out the popcorn if you like.

    This is a question of facts and evidence. Whoever has the best conkers will win.

    • by eyenot ( 102141 )

      No, no, just no.

      I read the article, and I read Myhrvold's paper, and NONE of this is scientific. It's all very, very plainly about politics.

      You can see me go through the process of coming to this conclusion down below, but just "no".

  • by mbone ( 558574 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @11:05AM (#52178575)
    To put it mildly, this paper has not received a very good response on the Minor Planet Mailing List (MPML, a discussion group for asteroid researchers). Here is one example, from Dave Herald in Australia:

    Turning now to a specific critique of Myhrvold's paper (which I find extremely tedious reading...) Fig 23 (on page 72!) is (from my perusal) the first (only?) point at which he presents diameters derived by his approach. It lists just three asteroids, and interestingly we have a single reasonably-well-determined occultation diameter for each of them. Importantly, for these three asteroids we have a measured diameter two compare against the two 'inferred' diameters, with the obvious ability to assess which inferred diameter is best in each case, and whether there is any consistency across different asteroids. To summarize the various results:

    Asteroid # 208 306 757

    NEOWISE 45.0km 51.6km 36.7km

    Fig 23 146.5km 83.8km 6.6km

    Occultations 48 x 42km 61 x 44 km 39 x 34km

    Clearly the occultation results align extremely well with NOWISE. In contrast there is major disagreement with the results of the author's "bootstrap" solution - with strong implication that his bootstrap methodology is seriously flawed. IMHO the consequence of this on the paper as a whole doesn't need to be stated...

  • Maybe he could put some Preparation-H on his enlarged asteroids.

  • Peer reviewers will determine whether Myhrvold's argument is basically reasonable, though not necessarily whether it's actually true. That's the most information anybody can get out of a scientific paper without understanding it. Truth is ultimately only determined by actual data.

  • Wright says his team doesn't have Myhrvold's computer codes, "so we don't know why he's screwing up."

    May be he used Microsoft Excel and failed to account for the various problems in its math library (like calculating the Ceiling and Floor on negative numbers).

  • by mustermark ( 104271 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2016 @03:29PM (#52181033)

    Astrophysicist here. I read his paper, and it strikes me as an engineer's approach rather than an astrophysicist's. He builds up a very complicated framework from many, many assumptions and gets a very complicated model with "more accurate" solutions.

    An astrophysicist learns where to make simplifying assumptions that ease the calculation and make the relationships clearer without sacrificing too much accuracy. The less complicated the model, the less likely you are to be wrong (Occam's Razor).

    Now I don't know in this specific instance if a simpler model is viable (I'm not an asteroid specialist), but the difference between his paper and all of the other hundreds of astrophysics papers I've read was stark. The sheer length of the paper suggests that it is highly improbable that there are no mistakes at all, even for someone of his intellectual capability.

    Now, couple that to the lack of a public release of his analysis code, and you have a conclusion emerging ...

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