October 10, 2012
unconsumption:


A new class of electronics can dissolve and disappear on a pre-set schedule, within a few minutes or a few years, depending on when you want them to go away.
They could live in the body and deliver drugs, they could stick on the exterior of buildings or tanks, and they can become compost instead of metal scrap—in other words, they turn the common conception of electronics completely upside down.
Transient electronics, as they’ve been dubbed, are a combination of silk and silicon designed to work seamlessly in our bodies and in our environments.
In a new study, researchers built a thermal device designed to monitor infection in a rodent and a 64-pixel digital camera—all from dissolvable material.

Fascinating! What if your old cellphone just disappeared? “Dissolvable material” seems kinda freaky, but … maybe a good thing if it’s real??
More: Awesome New Electronics Can Dissolve and Disappear When They’re No Longer Needed | Popular Science

Oh wow.

unconsumption:

A new class of electronics can dissolve and disappear on a pre-set schedule, within a few minutes or a few years, depending on when you want them to go away.

They could live in the body and deliver drugs, they could stick on the exterior of buildings or tanks, and they can become compost instead of metal scrap—in other words, they turn the common conception of electronics completely upside down.

Transient electronics, as they’ve been dubbed, are a combination of silk and silicon designed to work seamlessly in our bodies and in our environments.

In a new study, researchers built a thermal device designed to monitor infection in a rodent and a 64-pixel digital camera—all from dissolvable material.

Fascinating! What if your old cellphone just disappeared? “Dissolvable material” seems kinda freaky, but … maybe a good thing if it’s real??

More: Awesome New Electronics Can Dissolve and Disappear When They’re No Longer Needed | Popular Science

Oh wow.

(via poptech)

July 25, 2012

myampgoesto11:

Audible Color by Hideaki Matsui and Momo Miyazaki

[watch the video]

Audible color is an audio-visual instrument. Sound is generated based on color detected by a web cam connected to a computer. Red, green and blue correspond with certain music notes. When the colors are mixed, the resulting secondary colors produce different notes.

The size of the colors influences the volume and frequency of the notes played. Color detection and sound generation were created and are controlled using Processing code. The system of audible color is based on a marriage between basic color and music theories. The colors of red, blue, and green are the visual foundation for color-mixing and the music notes A, D, and F are the base triad that corresponds to the colors. The secondary colors (colors made when the foundational three are mixed) of purple, teal and brown are tuned to the musical triad C, E and G. The visual of the mixing of red, blue and/or green mirrors the aural output of combined notes. 

The ‘painting’ aspect is not restricted to water droplets from a pipette. Numerous experiments were performed using substances such as acrylic paint, food dye in milk with soap, and ordinary household objects. Each investigation created a new type of fun and easy gestural music-making.

[found at Design Boom]

This is one of those wonderful ideas that immediately makes me think, “Damn, I wish I had thought of that!” A beautiful experiment in synesthesia.

July 10, 2012
npr:

sciencesoup:

What does space smell like?
It’s strange to think that the near-vacuum of space could have a smell, and stranger still that humans—atmospheric creatures—can actually experience it. Astronauts have consistently reported the same strange odour after lengthy space walks, bringing it back in on their suits, helmets, gloves and tools. It’s bitter, smoky, metallic smell—like seared steak, hot metal and arc welding smoke all rolled into one. NASA have asked a chemist, Steve Pearce, to reproduce the smell to use during acclimatization training, mapping out the likely chemistry using natural materials to mimic the odor for accuracy. It’s believed that the smell is caused by high-energy vibrations in particles that mix with the air when brought inside. In the future, we might even recreate the smell of the moon, Mars, Mercury or any place in the universe, provided we have the right chemical information. In fact, we can even recreate the smell of the heart of the galaxy—astronomers searching for animo acids in Sagittarius B2, a vast dust cloud in the middle of the Milky Way, have reported that due to a substance called ethyl formate, it smells and tastes of raspberries and rum—much more pleasant than seared steak and metal.
Read an interview with Steve Pearce


I love the weird human experiential details of things that seem very abstract and un-human, like space travel.
Also, I’m going to make my millions selling space perfume. Heart of the Galaxy: coming soon to a make up counter near you.

npr:

sciencesoup:

What does space smell like?

It’s strange to think that the near-vacuum of space could have a smell, and stranger still that humans—atmospheric creatures—can actually experience it. Astronauts have consistently reported the same strange odour after lengthy space walks, bringing it back in on their suits, helmets, gloves and tools. It’s bitter, smoky, metallic smell—like seared steak, hot metal and arc welding smoke all rolled into one. NASA have asked a chemist, Steve Pearce, to reproduce the smell to use during acclimatization training, mapping out the likely chemistry using natural materials to mimic the odor for accuracy. It’s believed that the smell is caused by high-energy vibrations in particles that mix with the air when brought inside. In the future, we might even recreate the smell of the moon, Mars, Mercury or any place in the universe, provided we have the right chemical information. In fact, we can even recreate the smell of the heart of the galaxy—astronomers searching for animo acids in Sagittarius B2, a vast dust cloud in the middle of the Milky Way, have reported that due to a substance called ethyl formate, it smells and tastes of raspberries and rum—much more pleasant than seared steak and metal.

Read an interview with Steve Pearce

I love the weird human experiential details of things that seem very abstract and un-human, like space travel.

Also, I’m going to make my millions selling space perfume. Heart of the Galaxy: coming soon to a make up counter near you.

July 9, 2012

explore-blog:

The pulsing pigment-producing cells of squid and cuttlefish set to classical music, just beautiful – the best thing since the universe set to Bach

( It’s Okay To Be Smart)

Despite the insidiousness of Pachelbel’s Canon, this is really wonderful.

June 29, 2012

fastcompany:

The man-made mechanical forest, five years in the making, consists of 18 supertrees that act as vertical gardens, generating solar power, acting as air venting ducts for nearby conservatories, and collecting rainwater. To generate electricity, 11 of the trees are fitted with solar photovoltaic systems that provide lighting and assist with water flow in the conservatories below. 

Singapore’s Supertrees Light Up The Night

A wonderful marriage of science and art, functionality and beauty. Absolutely gorgeous.

(via npr)

April 29, 2012
explore-blog:

A geologic map of Mars viewed from above the northern polar ice cap, based on surveys from the Viking orbiter spacecrafts, with colors depicting rock type (lithology), rock layers (stratigraphy), and structure. Part of a collection of artistic planetary maps.

explore-blog:

A geologic map of Mars viewed from above the northern polar ice cap, based on surveys from the Viking orbiter spacecrafts, with colors depicting rock type (lithology), rock layers (stratigraphy), and structure. Part of a collection of artistic planetary maps.

(Source: )

March 28, 2012
curiositycounts:

Life imitates art in Perpetual Ocean, an absolutely gorgeous HD animation of our ocean currents as NASA Scientific Visualization Studio sees. Any fan of Van Gogh’s Starry Nights will see the beauty in this enchanting interpretation of data. 

Click through for the hypnotizing video.

curiositycounts:

Life imitates art in Perpetual Ocean, an absolutely gorgeous HD animation of our ocean currents as NASA Scientific Visualization Studio sees. Any fan of Van Gogh’s Starry Nights will see the beauty in this enchanting interpretation of data. 

Click through for the hypnotizing video.

2:09pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Z-iN_vIiFCFk
  
Filed under: Science NASA Art Van Gogh 
February 24, 2012
curiositycounts:

Truth. Even better, “systematic wonder.”   (via)

curiositycounts:

Truth. Even better, “systematic wonder.”   (via)

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