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Science

A collection of 75 posts

environment

Fire for Plants

Is fire really evil? Maybe it’s just a natural part of the environment. This post can also be viewed on Medium [https://medium.com/snipette/fire-for-plants-1b5c930dfbc2?source=friends_link&s...

  • Thuận Sarzynski
    Thuận Sarzynski
immortality

Forever Young

From Greek mythology to Turritopsis jellyfish: an investigation into immortality.

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
  • Akil Ravi
    Akil Ravi
Could Dragons Exist?

Darwin and Dragons

How to make a dragon in just a few (hundred million) short years

  • Zia Steele
    Zia Steele
Could Dragons Exist?

Foraging with Fire

How would dragons avoid burning themselves and their habitats?

  • Zia Steele
    Zia Steele
Could Dragons Exist?

A Scorching Symbiosis

One special type of bacteria could be the key to dragonfire.

  • Zia Steele
    Zia Steele
Could Dragons Exist?

The Biochemistry of Breathing Fire

Could dragons do what no known organism has done before?

  • Zia Steele
    Zia Steele
Could Dragons Exist?

An Anatomy for Aviation

Large animals have trouble flying. How would a dragon pull it off?

  • Zia Steele
    Zia Steele
Could Dragons Exist?

The Science of Flight and Firebreath

Are dragons feasible? Let’s rewind evolution to find out.

  • Zia Steele
    Zia Steele
food

Feel the Churn

The science and history behind the making of butter

  • Abbey Thiel
    Abbey Thiel
magic

The Last Sorcerer

Newton was an alchemist. Mary Poppins may have been a witch. What are scientists today?

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
  • Manasa Kashi
    Manasa Kashi
sustainability

After Farming

The hunter-gatherers learnt to farm. What are the farmers learning?

  • Thuận Sarzynski
    Thuận Sarzynski
science

Ethics of Science

Is it possible to remove moral values from science?

  • Kawtar Karmouni
    Kawtar Karmouni
quantum physics

Life, Death, and Teleportation

Would teleportation transport you or kill you? And what exactly are “you” anyway?

  • Zia Steele
    Zia Steele
space

A Tether to Space

Elevators take us up buildings in a jiffy. What if they could take us to the sky?

  • Paul Cathill
    Paul Cathill
science

The CSI Effect

Science, society, and the truth behind expert testimony.

  • Aaradhana Natarajan
    Aaradhana Natarajan
philosophy

Never Say Die

There are so many ways to be immortal. Which one works for you?

  • Phillip Shirvington
    Phillip Shirvington
science

Scientific Consensus

What it is and why this is a good time to start caring.

  • GlenQ
    GlenQ
science

Good Genes

Scientifically, you’re better-looking than your parents. And, your kids will be better-looking than you.

  • Danny Kane
    Danny Kane
science

A Device for Randomness

Ancient Athenians elected people by lottery. Are eight-dimensional quasi-creatures doing the same to us?

  • Marina T Alamanou
    Marina T Alamanou
food

Science of Salt

We have become a salt-obsessed society, but maybe we can blame our ancestors for that?a

  • Abbey Thiel
    Abbey Thiel
history

Physics, Life, and Everything Nice

What a hot cup of coffee tells us about the history of life on Earth

  • Anirudh Kanisetti
    Anirudh Kanisetti
sleep

Smart Sleep

The mythology, technology, and commercialism of our slumbers.

  • Marina T Alamanou
    Marina T Alamanou
food

Coffee at Work

We may not have the same jobs as you, but our life is busy too.

  • Thuận Sarzynski
    Thuận Sarzynski
culture

Returning to Trees

A wander through the science and symbolism of majestic oaks, as we search for a way home to forests.

  • Bianca Pascall
    Bianca Pascall
food

How Meat made us Human

Eating more meat made us human. Now our survival demands we eat less of it.

  • Ryan Reudell
    Ryan Reudell
Bees

Sweat Bees

These tiny, colourful bees make great pollinators — and they love the taste of human sweat.

  • lila westreich
    lila westreich
coronavirus

Gaming the Coronavirus

How a World of Warcraft bug could provide insights into the world’s latest epidemic.

  • Thuận Sarzynski
    Thuận Sarzynski
food

Bubbly Beverages

The 17th-century mistake that put the ‘fizz’ into fizzy

  • Abbey Thiel
    Abbey Thiel
poetry

Mind in the Machine

Master or slave?

  • Phillip Shirvington
    Phillip Shirvington
Bees

Lone Bee

Why solitary bee awareness should be the new ‘it’ item on everyone’s holiday wishlist.

  • lila westreich
    lila westreich
poetry

No Matter: No Mind?

A history of the universe in verse

  • Phillip Shirvington
    Phillip Shirvington
philosophy

But what is Spirituality?

Is it really all just mumbo-jumbo woo-woo talk?

  • Will Kenway
    Will Kenway
Education

Moral Brakes

Our incomplete education could end the world. Can the humanities save us from ourselves?

  • Ryan Reudell
    Ryan Reudell
Artificial Intelligence

Robots Turning

How do we prevent robots from turning on their human masters?

  • Phillip Shirvington
    Phillip Shirvington
Microbiology

The Hot Life

Hot springs, colourful microbes: surviving in a world that’s unique, beautiful, and hostile

  • Bayleigh Murray
    Bayleigh Murray
science

Fine Tuning

How come our Universe was fine-tuned to enable the miracle of Life? Consider Omega. Commonly known as the density parameter, it tells us how important gravity is in the expanding universe. ...

  • Phillip Shirvington
    Phillip Shirvington
chemistry

Endangered Elements

The world, and your phone, is dependent on chemicals. What happens when they run out? When  you hear the word “elements”, you probably think of the Periodic Table.  A large uneven grid, list...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
science

Cobwebs of the Mind

What science can tell us about dreams and consciousness.

  • Aaradhana Natarajan
    Aaradhana Natarajan
Quantum Computing

The Curious Cat

Superposition, tunnelling, entanglement, and other bits and pieces of quantum mechanics In Part 2 [https://medium.com/snipette/waving-particles-30bdc85daa7e?source=friends_link&sk=d6ee124ae6...

  • Sidharth Jain
    Sidharth Jain
Double Slit Experiment

Waving Particles

Why duality is like an elephant: an overview of the double-slit experiment and its implications Last time [https://medium.com/snipette/the-uncertainty-principle-2561e2ee3be2?source=friends_l...

  • Sidharth Jain
    Sidharth Jain
physics

The Uncertainty Principle

Is a particle a wave? Is a mango a line? Some things can never be known for certain. Quantum  Physics has always been that one mysterious theory that has been really  difficult to understand...

  • Sidharth Jain
    Sidharth Jain
Consciousness

The Problem with Science

Theories are great at describing the world—but we need to take them less literally Do you want the good news or the bad news first? I agree, always start with the bad news. As  a former sc...

  • Will Kenway
    Will Kenway
CERN

The Beauty of Physics

Join my journey from the mid-galactic black-hole to the keratin in your hair, and discover the beauty of physics The  evening before my departure to Geneva, Switzerland, I was looking up in ...

  • Anonymous One
history

Anticlockwise

Why does the Earth spin one way and not the other? There’s a logical reason. The Sun sits, a big bright blob in the centre of the Solar System. Small and smaller balls spin round in concentr...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
Black Holes

Black Hole Photography

Or, how to make a telescope as large as the world This is it. The first image that has ever been taken of any black hole. And maybe it doesn’t look spectacular at first, but consider this: ...

  • Sidharth Jain
    Sidharth Jain
biology

Cheese Crystals

White spots are good: are you throwing away a perfectly good cheese? The  funny thing about being a food scientist, is that before meeting me,  most people have never even heard of my field....

  • Abbey Thiel
    Abbey Thiel
nature

The Mound

Who owns the Mound? The answer is not so clear. The Mound rises up like a tiny mountain on the grass. Tiny compared to mountains, that is: on the scale of those who live in it, the Mound can...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
biology

Left Brain, Right Brain

Are we basically two people at once? We like to think that each one of us is only one kind of person, a whole comprised of various facets and feelings. And as an extension of that, we like t...

  • Manasa Kashi
    Manasa Kashi
Perception

Speed of Time

How fast does time move? The answer depends on what you’re thinking. Time is fixed. A second is a second, there’s no question about it. Or so people thought. Then came Albert Einstein, with...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
nature

Life Time

How fast does time go, exactly? The answer can depend on who you are. The screen flickers high and low, in bits and pieces. Some regions go dim for a while, only to brighten up again. The pi...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
Atmosphere

Thin Air

What is a plant made of? The answer may surprise you. Plants grow. Everyone knows that. But what do they grow from? Animals take material from the food they eat: part of it comes out the ot...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
Atmosphere

Bibliography for Thin Air

Thin Air [https://medium.com/snipette/thin-air-1827216638bd] The book that sparked ‘Thin Air’ This piece was inspired by Gabrielle Walker’s book An Ocean of Air. A substantial amount of the ...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
Books

Reading Mind

It’s not just about turning text to thoughts: how you read, and what you read it on, can literally change your brain. This piece began in my quest to try and find an answer to the age-old de...

  • Manasa Kashi
    Manasa Kashi
Anthropology

First Words

Humans dream of contacting aliens — but will we understand what they’re saying? “Are we alone in the Universe?” That’s a question humans have been pondering all the time, including in this ...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
Microbiology

The Ice-Maker’s Story

I help water to freeze and ice to fall, and can make clouds rain at my command. Birds have large wings and streamlined bodies to help them stay aloft. But if you’re small enough, you don’t n...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
Aliens

Looking for Life

Nobody’s found signs of alien life yet. So why do they keep on looking? Extra-terrestrial life. What images just popped into your mind? Little green men? ET, the gnarly but ultimately friend...

  • Manasa Kashi
    Manasa Kashi
biology

Riding the Sky

They talk about Life on other planets, but have we even seen the limits of life here on Earth? Planet Mars is ice cold and desert dry. Except in the frozen ice-caps, there’s not a drop of wa...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
biology

Sleeping Beauty, Underground

Will the leguminous Prince find her? And what root will he take? This story can also be read on Medium [https://medium.com/snipette/sleeping-beauty-underground-d87ba46df792?source=friends_li...

  • Thuận Sarzynski
    Thuận Sarzynski
Antibiotics

Infectious Cures

How does a river fight disease? By making your illness catch a cold. The river Ganga has always been known for its healing powers and the purity of its water. Even when stored for a long tim...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
biology

Exile by Oxygen

Some organisms never quite worked out how to live with it. This is the story of where they went. Off the coast of Japan, for four months a year, the deep blue sea is transformed into a stunn...

  • Manasa Kashi
    Manasa Kashi
Etymology

Defining Planets

First there were six. Then there were nine. And then there were eight. Now, are there 110? The English word “planet’ has been in use for centuries. It was being used in the time of Old Engli...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
culture

The Purple Sky

Light, sight, and why things may not be the same colours they look Did you know that the sky looks blue? You probably did, specially if you’ve seen it. But just because it looks blue doesn’t...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
biology

Cells

The little creatures that rule the world Drifting through the warm ocean waters, the Portuguese Man-o’-War is no ordinary jellyfish. It is not a jellyfish at all. In fact, it may not even be...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
forest

Travelling Trees

They may seem still. But actually, they’re always on the move. Ants move around while travelling. But when trees travel, they also stay put exactly where they are. Trees don’t travel like w...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
internet

Rover Control

4G is coming to the Moon. Can it be used for spacecraft on Mars? “Download large files in a matter of minutes. Enjoy group video chat with your friends and family. Stream movies and more, wh...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
Humour

Common Relativity

There’s General Relativity and Special Relativity. And then, there’s the relativity we encounter every day. I’ve noticed that, when Einstein’s Theory of Relativity is discussed, it’s often d...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
agriculture

The Story of my Carbon

Carbon is not alive. But without carbon, there would be no life at all. This story can also be read on Medium [https://medium.com/snipette/the-story-of-my-carbon-9c8f6c2ca336?source=friends_...

  • Thuận Sarzynski
    Thuận Sarzynski
history

Mars’ Missing Magnetosphere

If Mars was magnetic, could Life have lived? Among the swirling clouds of cosmic dust, small lumps were slowly forming. Tiny particles happened to get together, and their combined gravity se...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
Atom

The Story of my Life

Childhood memories of a Carbon atom Actually, come to think of it, “life” may not be the most fitting term. To be considered alive, I’d have to meet several criteria —being able to breathe, ...

  • Manasa Kashi
    Manasa Kashi
Gravity

Falling Moon

Why does the moon stay up in the sky? Because it’s always falling. If you go out at night on the 31st of January, remember to look up at the moon. Wednesday’s full-moon is going to be a spe...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
Fish

Sleeping Fish

When you’re inside water, sleeping is not so easy. At first glance, it looks like just a ball of baked mud. The scorching sun has been shining down on the land for months, turning the very b...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
adaptation

Ocean Lights

Fireflies blink their lights. In the ocean, it’s more dramatic. Deep down in the ocean, there is no red. The ocean is so deep and so filled with water, that even light has to fight to make ...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
culture

The Length of Things

It might not seem something as constant as length would have a history, but it does. In fact, it goes back to the times of ancient civilizations. To begin with, you can’t really specify the...

  • Manasa Kashi
    Manasa Kashi
Australia

Australia Drifts

The wildlife of Australia includes a lot of endemic species — that is, species that are found only in Australia, and nowhere else in the world. 83% of the Australian mammals are endemic, as ...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
Desert

Getting Hot

If you were a vulture flying for the first time across certain parts of the desert, you would notice the waves. Not cool wet ones, but yellow, lumbering ones spread out across the land. The ...

  • Badri Sunderarajan
    Badri Sunderarajan
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