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Lighter Side News
Your garden is absolutely glowing, darling
May 5, 2024 — n the realm of plant care, some people have worse than a snowball’s chance in the desert at achieving success. Some attempted gardeners are chronic under-feeders. By contrast, others can’t help but flood their plant life in too much water. In any case, many seem to lack the fundamentals of a green thumb. But don’t let us dissuade you from trying to raise that cactus in the rainforest. In a recent development that is unlikely to help the horticulturally hopeless grow much beyond moss on a rock,...
Quantum clouds in my coffee
Apr 2, 2024 — If there is one thing that fuels science researchers, it’s an unwavering dedication to their craft. If there are two things, it’s unwavering dedication — and a metric ton of caffeine creating a feedback loop of calculated madness and scientific...
Laser scarecrow deters murders
Mar 5, 2024 — America’s enthrallment with corn can crop up in strange ways. Recall the internet-enabled rise to fame of Tariq Day, also known as “The Corn Kid,” in 2022. Day’s love of corn, which, thanks to modern technology, he reiterated time and time again on...
The smartest dope in the room
Feb 1, 2024 — There are many roadblocks that can arise on the roadway to scientific discovery. Money always seems to be a big factor. When the well runs dry, so does access to the lab. But besides the almighty dollar, the other major obstacle faced by researchers...
Can you NIR me now?
Jan 5, 2024 — Since the Guinness Book of World Records was first published in 1955, breaking records has become a fascination among certain people. Some World Records might seem frivolous, such as the record for the most couples to simultaneously share a strand...
Veni, vidi, crevi crystallis photonicis
Dec 4, 2023 — The Roman Republic is known for many things. Besides influencing most of the western world with their politics, philosophies, and language, Romans were also early adopters of innovations that are still used today, such as traffic signs, aqueducts,...
A new twist on feeling the blues
Nov 1, 2023 — One of the most fascinating aspects of nature is how organisms evolved defense mechanisms over time. Like felines’ retractable claws or the Komodo dragon’s septic mouth, some mechanisms adopt the view that a good offense makes the best defense....
Trees sprout a new branch of photovoltaics
Oct 1, 2023 — We’ve all heard the phrase “make like a tree and leave,” right? Well, researchers from Imperial College London’s Clean Energy Processes program are taking this saying to the next level by looking toward nature in a bid to increase efficiency in...
Smart pants can tell when you're kicking it
Sep 1, 2023 — The term “smart dresser” typically describes someone with a strong sense of style or who is fashion-forward. Researchers from the Federal University of Espírito Santo in Brazil took a more literal interpretation of the term when...
Missing the forest for the trees
Aug 2, 2023 — Covering 2.7 million square miles, the Amazon Basin is home to an estimated 16,000 different tree species and 390 billion individual trees. Yet one tree was interesting enough to lure a group of researchers on a six-day trek through the rainforest...
Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa gets a holographic makeover
Jul 3, 2023 — When Leonardo da Vinci immortalized Lisa del Giocondo with his portrait of her in 1503, he created her famously subtle smile and lifelike flesh by using deliberately irregular brushstrokes. His masterpiece, the “Mona Lisa,” not only became one of...
A laser fit for kings
Jun 1, 2023 — Have you heard of the Beam Team? No? Well, the team in question is the Sacramento Kings basketball team, while the beam is a vertical column of purple laser light that towers into the skies above California’s capital city when the Kings win an NBA...
Could spinning lasers hold the key to time travel?
May 3, 2023 — In the movie Back to the Future, it was a DeLorean sports car traveling at 88 mph. In Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, it was an hourglass necklace. In “Doctor Who,” a phone booth. But in real life, what would time travel, if...
Lasers turn trash to cash
Mar 3, 2023 — One of the most well-known aims of the quasi-scientific field of alchemy was to transmute lead or other base metals into noble metals, such as gold. In a similar spirit of taking something cheap and abundant and transforming it into something rare...
Mechanochromic is the new black
Feb 3, 2023 — Clothing has always used color to convey cultural identity, societal functions, or social standing. But, for centuries, fabric colors were subject to exacting mineral extractions and tortuous supply chains that consigned humanity’s limited...
Facial ID technology achieves seal of recognition
Jan 3, 2023 — People generally associate facial recognition with surveillance, Apple’s Face ID, and perhaps the biometric payment methods being deployed in China. The conservation of seals probably doesn’t make the list. The technology has found use...
Infrared microscopy plays first fiddle to solve a violin mystery
Dec 1, 2022 — Stradivarius violins produce elegant sound with a level of clarity that is unparalleled by modern instruments, according to many musicians. An 18th-century Stradivarius sold for $15 million in June. In the same month, news reports estimated that a...
Lasers fry roaches on the fly
Nov 1, 2022 — Roaches are notoriously hard to eradicate. Their ability to endure has made them emblematic of the last vestige of life that will survive an apocalyptic nuclear exchange. Humans, who like to be upstaged by insects even less than they enjoy finding...
Could lasers put cold brew on a hot streak?
Oct 4, 2022 — Not all that is cold is cool. Cold brew coffee, for example, is simply better than iced hot brew. If you don’t believe the studied opinions of millions of hipsters and millennials, then believe Technavio Research, which recently projected that the...
Lasers probe prehistoric belly buttons
Sep 2, 2022 — Lost cities of the Khmer Empire, ancient Roman aqueducts and roads, Aztec and Mayan ruins — these are just a few of the archaeological finds that laser imaging has enabled. Many of these discoveries have reshaped our understanding of human...
Lidar reveals the hottest properties for a Western Australian lizard
Aug 2, 2022 — A number of indicators point to the cooling of the real estate market. Interest rates are ticking up. Inventory is growing. Sellers are cutting prices. In Western Australia — one of the literally, if not figuratively, hottest housing markets...
The doctor will see you (anywhere) now
Jun 6, 2022 — Once again, life imitates “Star Trek.” An earthbound doctor made a virtual house call on the International Space Station (ISS) — as a live, interactive holographic visitor. While the technology was not quite as sophisticated as...
Lasers deter murders, invite fines in Sunnyvale
Apr 27, 2022 — For the past few years, Sunnyvale, Calif., has seen a growing number of nightly murders as unwanted guests flock to its downtown area. While these murders don’t necessitate adding deadbolts to residents’ doors, they do encourage prudence...
The cutting edge in ancient Chinese traditions
Apr 7, 2022 — Few civilizations are as old and storied as China, a corner of the world rich with cultural traditions that trace back through the region’s history and into myth. The drinking of tea, for instance, traces its origins to the folk mythology of...
Can lidar enable a goldfish to drive?
Mar 2, 2022 — Despite Betteridge’s law of headlines — an adage that states that any headline that asks a question can be answered by the word “no” — it turns out that lidar can, in fact, enable a goldfish to drive. Courtesy of...
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May 2024
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