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May 10 2012

hairinmy
Reposted fromGaretL GaretL viajohl johl

May 08 2012

hairinmy
Meanwhile in science
Reposted fromtaw taw viayetzt yetzt

February 23 2012

hairinmy

February 01 2012

hairinmy
A report released today in the Proceedings of the Royal Society A lays out the possible inner workings of the Vikings’ legendary sólarsteinn, which was said to reveal the true bearing of a hidden sun, even on overcast days and during long summer twilights in the northerly latitudes. Researchers long speculated that the sunstone might have been a transparent type of calcite, common in Iceland, that has optical properties akin to linearly polarizing filters for a camera (see photograph above).

__________________________________
Click the image to be brought to this Discovery.com article
Reposted fromexistential existential viamondkroete mondkroete

December 21 2011

hairinmy
The Kelvin–Helmholtz instability, after Lord Kelvin and Hermann von Helmholtz, can occur when velocity shear is present within a continuous fluid, or when there is sufficient velocity difference across the interface between two fluids. One example is wind blowing over a water surface, where the wind causes the relative motion between the stratified layers (i.e., water and air). The instability will manifest itself in the form of waves being generated on the water surface. The waves can appear in numerous fluids and have been spotted in clouds, Saturn's bands, waves in the ocean, and in the sun's corona.
Reposted fromwonderfulnature wonderfulnature viasofias sofias

November 20 2011

hairinmy
Wow! This new metal - which is 99.9 percent air - is so light that it can sit atop dandelion fluff without damaging it. It was developed by a team of researchers from UC Irvine, HRL Laboratories and the California Institute of Technology and is about one hundred times lighter than Styrofoam.
Reposted fromscience science viafasel fasel
hairinmy
Here is a picture of the visible spectrum. Can you find the color magenta?Visible spectrum (gringer)

Why can't you find magenta in the visible spectrum? This is because magenta cannot be emitted as a wavelength of light. Yet magenta exists; you can see it on this color wheel.

Color wheel (gringer)

Magenta is the complementary color to green, or the color of the afterimage you would see after you stare at a green light. All of the colors of light have complementary colors that exist in the visible spectrum, except for green's complement, magenta. Most of the time your brain averages the wavelengths of light you see in order to come up with a color. For example, if you mix red light and green light, you'll see yellow light. However, if you mix violet light and red light, you see magenta rather than the average wavelength, which would be green. Your brain has come up with a way to bring the ends of the visible spectrum together in a way that makes sense. Pretty cool, don't you think?

http://chemistry.about.com/b/2010/02/17/what-is-the-wavelength-of-magenta.htm

Reposted fromiggy iggy viadesi desi

November 18 2011

hairinmy
8315_b347
Reposted fromfau fau viamynnia mynnia

November 10 2011

hairinmy

October 29 2011

hairinmy
Star Trek: The Original Series:
  • "Heisenberg compensators" are used to explain how transporters work in spite of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle.
  • Someone asked Star Trek scientific advisor Michael Okuda how the Heisenberg compensators worked. He replied, "They work very well, thank you."
TV Tropes: Lampshade Hanging
Reposted bywonkoleyrersciencesofiasmkhlpaketknuspersoupercitizen428

October 18 2011

hairinmy
Hundreds of pictures of Earth, each taken at about 6AM , showing the terminator - the day/night line - over the course of one year (2010sep-2011sep).
Taken by METEOSAT-9 Earth-observing satellite.

Credit: NASA Earth Observatory
Reposted fromwelttraum welttraum viaekelias ekelias

October 15 2011

hairinmy
Play fullscreen
2011 Nobel Prize: Dark Energy feat. Sean Carroll - YouTube
Reposted fromscience science viadesi desi

August 04 2011

hairinmy
Play fullscreen
‪Flower Pot Fridge!‬
Reposted fromscience science viadesi desi

July 28 2011

hairinmy

July 08 2011

hairinmy

Yet the images of signals flashing across frontal lobes have pushed scientists to re-examine the very way creativity is measured in a laboratory.

“Creativity is kind of like pornography — you know it when you see it,” said Rex Jung, a research scientist at the Mind Research Network in Albuquerque. Dr. Jung, an assistant research professor in the department of neurosurgery at the University of New Mexico, said his team was doing the first systematic research on the neurology of the creative process, including its relationship to personality and intelligence.

The Mind Research Network and Charting Creativity - NYTimes.com

June 30 2011

hairinmy
hairinmy
Solar Sinter” is a 3d printer by Markus Kayser that lives on sand and sun. It’s based on selective laser sintering (SLS), using Saharan sand as the medium and sunlight from a Fresnel lens in place of laser.

via makerbot
Reposted frombrightbyte brightbyte

June 27 2011

hairinmy

What children’s skulls look like as they prepare to lose their baby teeth

Reposted fromsoupenfrassper soupenfrassper

June 21 2011

hairinmy
What lives in the rainforest, under a tree? Spongiforma squarepantsii, a new species of mushroom almost as strange as its cartoon namesake.
Reposted fromm68k m68k viaekelias ekelias

May 20 2011

hairinmy
Play fullscreen
Could Jesus Walk on Custard? - QI
better make some custard. in the worst case, you have custard.
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