stefan, to science
@stefan@stefanbohacek.online avatar

"In 1912, Oskar von Miller, an electrical engineer and founder of the Deutsches Museum, had an idea: Could you project an artificial starry sky onto a dome, as a way of demonstrating astronomical principles to the public?"

https://spectrum.ieee.org/planetarium-history

droughtcenter, to climate
@droughtcenter@mastodon.world avatar

US Drought Monitor 5-16-24

For the 50 states and Puerto Rico, the US Drought Monitor shows 11.71% in moderate drought or worse, compared to 12.66% last week.

ianRobinson, to books
@ianRobinson@mastodon.social avatar

Delivered.
#Books #Science #Physics

ianRobinson, to books
@ianRobinson@mastodon.social avatar

Out for delivery: The Biggest Ideas in the Universe 2: Quanta and Fields by Sean Carroll.

#Books #Science #Physics

kubikpixel, to web
@kubikpixel@chaos.social avatar
gutenberg_org, to science
@gutenberg_org@mastodon.social avatar

in 1888.

Nikola Tesla delivers a lecture describing the equipment which will allow efficient generation and use of alternating currents to transmit electric power over long distances.

Experiments with alternate currents of very high frequency and their application to methods of artificial illumination. By Nikola Tesla

https://teslasciencecenter.org/announcements/experiments-with-alternate-currents-of-very-high-frequency-and-their-application-to-methods-of-artificial-illumination-by-nikola-tesla/

Miro_Collas, to music
@Miro_Collas@masto.ai avatar

Beethoven was full of lead, arsenic and mercury – The History Blog
http://www.thehistoryblog.com/archives/70200

"Analysis of authenticated locks clipped from Ludwig von Beethoven’s prodigious head of hair as he lay dying has found astronomically high levels of lead, arsenic and mercury. The poisoning was so severe, it may explain the symptoms that plagued him at the end of his life."

stshank, to ai
@stshank@mstdn.social avatar

Using AI to oversee dynamic fusion machines is a hot area of research. It doesn't mean generative AI like ChatGPT. It's old-school AI, where you train a machine to recognize patterns in complex real-world data then let it make decisions.

https://www.pppl.gov/news/2024/using-artificial-intelligence-speed-and-improve-most-computationally-intensive-aspects

ScienceDesk, to science
@ScienceDesk@flipboard.social avatar

More than five million people are bitten by snakes every year, resulting in thousands of deaths and permanent disabilities. Those chilling statistics didn’t stop one PhD student, João Miguel Alves-Nunes, from stepping on deadly and dangerous vipers more than 40,000 times. Alven-Nunes tells Science about putting himself in danger for a scientific experiment, what happened when one snake’s fangs broke through his protective boot, and why even that harrowing experience won’t diminish his love for "working with these animals." https://flip.it/zRaVCF

ManyRoads, to science
@ManyRoads@mstdn.social avatar

"Every Awful Thing Trump Has Promised to Do in a Second Term
The former president has pushed a slew of terrifying proposals, both publicly and privately, that he plans to unleash on America should he take down Biden"

https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-features/trump-second-term-plans-wildest-proposals-1234947327/

lilithsaintcrow, to random
@lilithsaintcrow@raggedfeathers.com avatar

Today has been all about research and whew, I am never writing THAT particular idea. It's not even going in the compost heap, I'm just gonna bin it and move on.

I feel like this is one of the few instances in which I will ever approach wisdom.

AccordionBruce,
@AccordionBruce@mastodon.social avatar

@lilithsaintcrow @RussSharek
I feel like there should be a Nobel prize for the best scientific rethinking or something

They all talk about breakthroughs, but I wish there was an award for honorably accepting new better data and changing your mind 📈

NicoleCRust, to science
@NicoleCRust@neuromatch.social avatar

When should one call themselves an X researcher?

There are so many different types of researchers. Weather researchers, climate researchers, brain researchers. And within those categories, the nuances (like memory researchers).

When someone says they are an X researcher, what does that imply to you? In other words, what qualifies? Does it just imply that they are curious about X? Or perhaps that they know a bit more about it - perhaps they've mastered some scholarly literature or they've done at least one experiment? Or maybe even published a paper in a peer reviewed journal? Or maybe even more - perhaps they have a body of work on the topic; maybe they even run a lab (and have grants to support X research).

On one hand, no one should gate keep curiosity! On the other, certain terms imply knowledge and qualifications. I'm a "researcher". But just because I know a lot about memory doesn't automatically mean that people should listen to me about climate or economics. And I once read a very good book about ecosystems, but I don't think that means I should quality as an ecosystem researcher. So what, then, might instead?

evelynefoerster, to history
@evelynefoerster@swiss.social avatar


How men evolved to care for babies — before society got in the way 🤓
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-01371-3

evelynefoerster, to history
@evelynefoerster@swiss.social avatar
ScienceDesk, to science
@ScienceDesk@flipboard.social avatar

A new gel made from milk proteins could neutralize alcohol’s effects before a dreaded hangover hits. Scientists Raffaele Mezzenga and Jiaqi Su, along with a team of researchers, were able to reduce blood alcohol levels in intoxicated mice by 40 percent in 30 minutes. Hang tight, Premier League and NFL fans — there’s still a lot of work to do before the gel will be safe for human trials. Science Alert has more: https://flip.it/gk7p1e

evelynefoerster, to history
@evelynefoerster@swiss.social avatar
hankg, to science

Why we can't have nice things...We've known about paper mills and lack of sufficient reviewers being a problem for a while now. It's been getting worse and worse. That's before we start seeing the expected massive increase from ChatGPT-style word vomiter crap. "Flood of Fake Science Forces Multiple Journal Closures" msn.com/en-us/money/markets/fl…

Wuzzy, to science
@Wuzzy@cyberplace.social avatar

As long society accepts genital "surgeries" on #intersex babies so they conform to some bullshit norms, we cannot call ourselves enlightened.

https://www.hrw.org/report/2017/07/25/i-want-be-nature-made-me/medically-unnecessary-surgeries-intersex-children-us

"Two common goals of these cosmetic 'normalizing' surgeries on children’s genitals are to enable #heterosexual penetrative intercourse, and to help the child #conform to #gender and sexual norms"

It's based on #ideology, not #science.
It MUST be condemned like #FGM <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Female_genital_mutilation>.

#surgery #LGBT #BodilyAutonomy

ScienceDesk, to science
@ScienceDesk@flipboard.social avatar

For the fifth time in three years, a group of orcas has sunk a ship in southwest Europe. This time an unknown number of killer whales attacked a 50-foot sailing yacht in the Strait of Gibraltar, ripped open its hull and sent the boat to the seafloor. Live Science has more, including what happened to the crew and why researchers believe the attacks are a learned behavior that could increase in the coming months. https://flip.it/0KoMeL

CultureDesk, to art
@CultureDesk@flipboard.social avatar

Microbial art — the process of creating living paintings with bacteria — has been around for nearly 100 years. It was first created by Alexander Fleming, who discovered penicillin in 1928 and was also an amateur artist. Atlas Obscura looks at this blend of art and science, some of the skilled folks who make it, and the potential health risks if it's not done carefully.

https://flip.it/vnxNsp

dagb, to climate Norwegian
@dagb@snabelen.no avatar

"Our research identified the fastest rates of past natural CO2 rise ever observed, and the rate occurring today, largely driven by human emissions, is 10 times higher."

https://phys.org/news/2024-05-chemical-analysis-natural-years-today.html

setiinstitute, to science
@setiinstitute@mastodon.social avatar

#PPOD: As carbon dioxide frost sublimates with the warming Martian spring, a pattern emerges of dark brown sand dunes interspersed with the remaining bright frost. Image taken by the HiRISE camera onboard NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / University of Arizona

#mars #science #space #scicomm

DrMLHarris, to science
@DrMLHarris@mastodon.social avatar

A survey of more than 3000 physical science researchers in over 100 countries reveals a sharp split in attitudes towards the use of AI in peer review, with 35% saying it will be harmful, 29% saying it will be beneficial, and 36% predicting it will have no impact.

https://physicsworld.com/a/researchers-split-on-merits-and-pitfalls-of-ai-in-peer-review-iop-publishing-survey-finds/

pomarede, to Kurzgesagt
@pomarede@mastodon.social avatar

Wow 300 images captured by Curiosity to build a panoramic survey at her Sol 4175 location, ten days ago. This video show them at a rate of 10/second. It took about 50 minutes for the rover to complete this scan with her left mast camera.

Credit images: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS/fredk

video/mp4

pomarede,
@pomarede@mastodon.social avatar

More Martian Magic taken from the Sol 4175 300-images panorama

#Curiosity #Mars #Sol4175 #rover #CuriosityRover #space #Martian #landscape #panorama #photography #science #STEM #engineering

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