Raised Illuminated (Taken with instagram)

Raised Illuminated (Taken with instagram)

Taken with instagram

Taken with instagram

Taken with instagram

Taken with instagram

Reblogged from Procrastinator
Get your focus straight and orchestrate fate.
— Blackalicious
Me (Taken with instagram)

Me (Taken with instagram)

expose-the-light:

New wonder-drug could give us all super-memory
Read more

expose-the-light:

New wonder-drug could give us all super-memory

Read more

Reblogged from Future of Science
thedailyfeed:

Daniel Burbank, the commander of the International Space Station, called Comet Lovejoy “the most amazing thing I’ve ever seen in space.” 

thedailyfeed:

Daniel Burbank, the commander of the International Space Station, called Comet Lovejoy “the most amazing thing I’ve ever seen in space.” 

Reblogged from The Daily

skepttv:

A haunting audio/visual representation of a geomagnetic storm

Geomagnetic storms are probably most famous for generating especially vibrant aurorae — some of the most breathtaking natural light displays on Earth. But these storms also give rise to all manner of electromagnetic interference across the radio spectrum — interference that gets picked up and measured by equipment here on Earth, like Canada’s CARISMA radio array.

The video featured up top, titled “20 Hz,” is an audio/visual representation of that magnetic disturbance. Created by filmmakers Ruth Jarman and Joe Gerhardt (who, as a team, go by Semiconductor), the pair took radio wave data collected by CARISMA and converted it — first into sound, and then into an accompanying animation — to create a piece of art that is simultaneously beautiful and bone-chilling.

The filmmakers describe what you’re watching:

20 Hz observes a geo-magnetic storm occurring in the Earth’s upper atmosphere. Working with data collected from the CARISMA radio array and interpreted as audio, we hear tweeting and rumbles caused by incoming solar wind, captured at the frequency of 20 Hertz. Generated directly by the sound, tangible and sculptural forms emerge suggestive of scientific visualisations. As different frequencies interact both visually and aurally, complex patterns emerge to create interference phenomena that probe the limits of our perception.

Absolutely stunning stuff.

[Spotted on Bad Astronomy]
20 Hz by Semiconductor

By Robert T. Gonzalez

Reblogged from SkepTV

skepttv:

World’s Best-Disguised Predator Fish?

One of the world’s best-camouflaged fishes is also the most venomous. The stonefish hides on the sea bottom, undetectable to its prey — that is, until it strikes.

Reblogged from SkepTV