Category archives: Science

MI weekly selection #58

MI weekly selection #58

Humanities & Social SciencesScienceTechnologyWeekly Selection

By César Tomé

Tiniest particles can now be put on the scale Tiny technology that uses a fluid-filled microchannel in a silicon cantilever can measure the mass of particles down to the attogram, or one-millionth of a trillionth of a gram. The technology, developed at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, sends particles through the microchannel. Their passing changes […]

MI weekly selection #57

MI weekly selection #57

Humanities & Social SciencesScienceTechnologyWeekly Selection

By César Tomé

Ancient strips of bamboo hold multiplication table A multiplication table in base 10 has been revealed in ancient strips of bamboo found in China that date back to around 305 B.C. About 2,500 bamboo strips were donated to Tsinghua University in Beijing five years ago, and researchers discovered ancient Chinese calligraphy written on the strips […]

Unexpected applications of basic research: moss forensics

Unexpected applications of basic research: moss forensics

Biology

By Rafael Medina

Different TV shows have popularized some details of the scientific methodology used in forensics in order to unravel the circumstances of a death. Regardless of the accuracy of your favorite TV series, sources of relevant forensic information are truly diverse and multidisciplinary: projectile physics, rate of chemical reactions or the knowledge of ecological processes, among […]

MI weekly selection #56

MI weekly selection #56

Humanities & Social SciencesScienceTechnologyWeekly Selection

By César Tomé

Quake lights likely caused by grinding rocks in rift zones The mysterious lights sometimes reported before or during earthquakes occur most frequently in geological rift zones. Researchers say the glow emanates from electricity generated as rocks grind together along vertical faults during temblors. Nature News Sea anemones living underneath Antarctica ice shelf A large number […]

Of crabs and men

Of crabs and men

Astrophysics

By Santiago Pérez-Hoyos

Time scales for astrophysical phenomena are sometimes thought to be overwhelmingly large and to exceed by far human life. While this is true for many cases, there are others which take the blink of an eye. Halfway between them, some interesting facts seem to happen in historical time scales and therefore have been analyzed by […]