.

Great scientific hazard warning signs from video game.

From the video game Portal, via Imgur.

Einstein’s office on the day of his death.

“The death of a public figure of Albert Einstein’s stature is the sort of event that, literally and figuratively, stops the presses. No scientist has been more famous, no antiwar activist’s voice has carried more conviction, no exemplar of genius has ever been as frequently invoked (albeit in language often dripping with sarcasm: “Nice going, Einstein!”) than the German-born father of modern physics. So when word came on a Monday morning in April 1955 that Einstein had died, at age 76, at New Jersey’s Princeton Hospital, the victim of an aortic aneurysm, the scramble was on to recount the story of his life and, as urgently, his death.

LIFE photographer Ralph Morse was among scores of journalists who descended on Princeton that day, hoping to find and report on something, anything, that might offer insight into what Einstein’s passing meant to his friends, family and peers as well as strangers around the world. No one but Morse, however, finagled his way into Einstein’s office. No one but Morse came away with a photograph that, six decades later, serves as a haunting reflection of both the man and his life’s work: a seemingly simple picture of Einstein’s desk, cluttered with notebooks, journals, a pipe, a tobacco tin; behind the desk a blackboard covered with equations and formulas that, to the untrained eye, possess an almost runic power.”

Photograph by Ralph Morse, via LIFE

(Do check out the link – the text above is pulled from that source, which tells the remarkable story of how Ralph managed to get this picture).

Schrödinger’s Cat vs. Pavlov’s Dog: Who would win?

I suppose, technically, the fight is over (one way or another) once the dog takes a look at the cat…

Also available as a t-shirt – link.

Cool paper animal calendars by Katsumi Tamura

By Katsumi Tamura.

Math is Magical. Where Math and Unicorns intersect.

Not sure where this originated. All over tumblr though…

Saturn pop up by Mengyu Chen. Cool animated gif.

I really want Mengyu to make one of these with the first law of thermodynamics…

By Mengyu Chen, via Colossal.

Kurt Vonnegut and the graph of infinite happiness

Classic Vonnegut on “The Shape of Stories.” The graphs only make it cooler.

Via @cogdog

Han and Chewbacca, gloriously pixelated.

By Michael B. Myers Jr.

Here and there…

Don’t usually publicize these things, but I’ll be giving a few talks in the next little while that should be fun (as is tradition, I promise to insert a little Chewbacca into all of these talks). In particular, I’ll be in New York for a few days, and game to chat with folks generally. Anyway, here is the line up for the next few weeks.

May 28th: “Going Public: Into the great wide open” CTLT Institute, 1:15PM – 3:45PM, Vancouver, UBC Campus, Irving K. Barber Learning Centre – Seminar Room 2.22A/B – link (free but registration required)

June 2nd: “How Biodiversity Became a Game.” World Science Festival. 2:15 PM – 2:45 PM, New York, Brooklyn, NYU Polytechnic Institute, MetroTech Plaza. link (free public talk – the line up looks awesome)

June 3rd: “The Ultimate Science Street Fair.” World Science Festival. 10AM – 6PM, New York, Washington Square Park. There will be a PHYLO tent, so pop by to visit, and check out the game with your kids. I’ll be giving the odd biodiversity talk every now and then too. link (free)

June 12th: “The Art of Science.” UBC Pathology Arts’ Gala, Vancouver, UBC Medical Student and Alumini Centre. link. I’ll be doing a spoken word performance here, a little along the lines of something like this. (tickets required)

June 15th: “Lessons Learnt in the Fine but Unpredictable Art of Crowdsourcing” Northern Voice. 1:00PM – 2:00PM, Vancouver, W2, SFU Cinema. link (conference registration required)

– – –

Finally, I’m hoping to make the NYCscitweetup on the evening of June 2nd. Check out this facebook event page for more info.

Radiohead’s “O.K. Computer” in glorious 8 bit. #song4mixtape #whoa

Very cool… Plus, I can’t get Airbag out of my head now.

By Quinton Sung, and full track listing at the YouTube page. Bonus is that you can download the entire album as well. (There’s also Kid A treatment as well).

Atomic model paintings by Brendan Monroe. #beautiful


After the New Model .18 x 18 in / 46 x 46 cm, acrylic on paper


After Bohr’s Model .18 x 18 in / 46 x 46 cm, acrylic on paper

This is a nice artistic treatment of the Bohr Model of atoms, which if you don’t quite remember, goes like this (from wiki):

“In atomic physics, the Bohr model, introduced by Niels Bohr in 1913, depicts the atom as a small, positively charged nucleus surrounded by electrons that travel in circular orbits around the nucleus—similar in structure to the solar system, but with electrostatic forces providing attraction, rather than gravity. This was an improvement on the earlier cubic model (1902), the plum-pudding model (1904), the Saturnian model (1904), and the Rutherford model (1911). Since the Bohr model is a quantum-physics–based modification of the Rutherford model, many sources combine the two, referring to the Rutherford–Bohr model.”

By Brendan Monroe.

Kid meets Manatee. Kid goes “whoa.” #natureandkids

It’s pretty simple really: kids plus biodiversity equals awesome.

This amazing photograph is by Christopher at CMGW Photography, via Colossal.

The Anatomy of the Hulk. #awesome via @flyingtrilobite

In a word, brilliant:


Hulk © Marvel Comics. This fan art has moral © Glendon Mellow. Share under Creative Commons.

See the full post here. By the talented Glendon Mellow, via @BoraZ.

It’s a Lucky Thing for Stem-Cell Research that the Following Passages aren’t in the Bible.

By DAVID NG

The petri plate is the work of Satan. How does God know what a petri plate is in this ancient time before the advent of scientific achievement? It is because he’s God, which is really handy for that sort of thing.

Go forth my children and use the word “embryo” whenever you can. It is a very pleasant-sounding word—say it as often as possible. In fact, my children, try this: point to anything and everything and say, “That’s an embryo.”

Mary tells us, “When a sperm and an egg come together, it represents the ultimate act of compassion and love. Therefore, it is a grievous sin to do studies on this type of thing. Plus, it’s also kind of private.”

The Lord says that our precious hearts and minds represent flesh of enormous piety. They should never be regenerated, regardless of the circumstances. While we’re at it, we should also never regenerate eyebrows, nosehairs, or nipples — although the Lord figures that that is a given anyway.

For people who have had an accident and have lost the use of their legs, it is not the way of the Lord to try to fix this pain. Instead, God will tell them, “That’s too bad.” Then he will likely tell them a good joke to make them feel better.

And Jesus said, “Liquid nitrogen is evil. Once, while playing with it, I froze my finger solid and it actually broke off. Lucky for me I’m the Son of God, and I can just grow another one.”

I wrote this back in 2005, and originally published at McSweeney’s.

This Snow Globe has a Coal Plant and Emits Smog.

Called No Globe and also for sale at a price of £2000:

No Globes
Mixed media snow globe
H20 x W20 x D20cm

The single greatest threat to the climate comes from burning coal but despite this a whole new fleet of dirty coal-fired power stations are on the verge of being built in the UK (the first for 30 years). The snow globe was designed for Ctrl.Alt.Shift in anticipation of the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen 2009.

Limited edition of 2 – only 1 remains”

By Dorothy, via Colossal.

Nikola Tesla, scientist, ready to kick butt

I’m thinking with Tesla and Franklin, we could add Marie Curie and be well on our way to an awesome new Superheroscientist team a la Avengers.

By Travis Pitts, via Hey Oscar Wilde!

If Leonardo Da Vinci were to sketch CERN’s Large Hadron Collider…

… You’d get this:

By Sergio Cittolin (CERN research physicist), via Kottke.

When dinosaurs adapt (or maybe more of a Voltron dinosaur thing). Either way, it’s awesome.

I love this picture. I also have it as an art card from Carded!

By Tony Cliff, via drawn.ca

Feynman nicely distills the essence of science

Robert Krulwich over at NPR highlights this lovely video where Feynman succinctly describes science.

Even better, is the commentary that Robert adds. It’s so lovely that I have to show you a little:

“Science is our way of describing — as best we can — how the world works. The world, it is presumed, works perfectly well without us. Our thinking about it makes no important difference. It is out there, being the world. We are locked in, busy in our minds. And when our minds make a guess about what’s happening out there, if we put our guess to the test, and we don’t get the results we expect, as Feynman says, there can be only one conclusion: we’re wrong.”

But do read the whole thing over at his blog. It’s awesome.

(@mwand, thanks for the link!)

Pythagorean Theorem Redux.

From Fake Science.