The Guild of Scientific Troubadours

The Guild of Scientific Troubadours

ex scientia, sono

  • Home
  • Join the Guild
  • The Scientific Troubadour Pledge
  • The SONGS

Science

Obesity contra dementia. (How the extra pounds protect your brain.)

10 April 2015 grant 0

Popular Science plunges into a study in The Lancet examining the possible neurological benefit of being obese:

The team of British researchers looked at records of almost two million patients

… Read the rest “Obesity contra dementia. (How the extra pounds protect your brain.)”

Humor boosts the bottom line. (Call it “funny business.”)

9 April 2015 grant 0

Scientific American examines what’s so wise about cracking up at meetings:

…Lehmann-Willenbrock and Allen explored whether humor in the workplace might also help a corporation

… Read the rest “Humor boosts the bottom line. (Call it “funny business.”)”

Scientists: The moon was formed when Earth smacked her twin sister.

8 April 2015 grant 0

Nature reports on a new way of looking at lunar formation that almost reads like a myth. The moon came to be when Earth collided with a near-identical sister planet:

The ‘giant impact’ hypothesis,

… Read the rest “Scientists: The moon was formed when Earth smacked her twin sister.”

The ethics of altering your children’s brains.

7 April 2015 grant 0

Frontiers in Human Neuroscience is asking the tough questions about what… and when… we should be doing to kids’ brains with electromagnetism:

As the intervention

… Read the rest “The ethics of altering your children’s brains.”

Drones for archaeology

6 April 2015 grant 0

PhysOrg has more on using drones… not just to find priceless historical sites, but to protect them from looters:

With aerial photographs taken by a homemade drone, researchers are

… Read the rest “Drones for archaeology”

Science Art: Detail from Plate LXVIII from British oology, c. 1835

5 April 2015 grant 0

BritishOologyAnthusAquaticusAnthusPratensis

That’s Anthus aquaticus and Anthus pratensis… the rock lark up top, and the tit lark at the bottom. Stop laughing, you in the back.

There are more lark eggs where these came from… Read the rest “Science Art: Detail from Plate LXVIII from British oology, c. 1835”

Robot feet that don’t need batteries.

2 April 2015 grant 0

Nature studies the beauty of mechanical advantage… in exoskeleton boots that do what feet do just a little bit better, faster, stronger:

People walking in the boots expend 7% less

… Read the rest “Robot feet that don’t need batteries.”

Go, little Mars drone! Fly! FLY!

1 April 2015 grant 0

The Atlantic has a heartwarming story about the little flying robot that could (if only we’d let it)… a plucky little space-drone named Morpheus:

While it may never fly in space

… Read the rest “Go, little Mars drone! Fly! FLY!”

A new hybrid super-termite… made in Florida.

31 March 2015 grant 0

PopSci reports on the PLOS One study on what happens when two invasive exotic species combine forces:

The two termite species, which originated in separate areas of Asia, spread across

… Read the rest “A new hybrid super-termite… made in Florida.”

Has your head ever exploded? (Or *sounded* like it?)

30 March 2015 grant 0

Science Daily peeks into the weird world of Exploding Head Syndrome, a surprisingly common condition in which young people are suddenly awoken by an ear-splitting boom:

Brian Sharpless,

… Read the rest “Has your head ever exploded? (Or *sounded* like it?)”

Science Art: Plate XII. An engine of great service to bore elms or other trees to make pipes to conveigh water, and for other uses, 1701

29 March 2015 grant 0

Plate XII An engine of great service to bore
Click to embiggen

An illustration from New and rare inventions of water-works; shewing the easiest ways to raise water higher than the spring. By which invention, the perpetual motion … Read the rest “Science Art: Plate XII. An engine of great service to bore elms or other trees to make pipes to conveigh water, and for other uses, 1701”

So, one of the most common household chemicals is killing you. Surprise!

26 March 2015 grant 0

Nature analyzes the new World Health Organization (WHO) determination that Roundup weedkiller causes cancer:

The cancer-research arm of the World Health Organization last week announced

… Read the rest “So, one of the most common household chemicals is killing you. Surprise!”

Here’s a hydrogen-fueled train.

25 March 2015 grant 0

Science Alert reports on a new train in China – not a design, an actual vehicle – that runs on hydrogen and leaves water for exhaust:

Manufactured by the Sifang Company, which

… Read the rest “Here’s a hydrogen-fueled train.”

Science Art: NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft as it passes Pluto and Pluto’s largest moon, Charon, in July 2015, by NASA/JHU APL/SwRI/Steve Gribben.

22 March 2015 grant 0

NewHorizonsPluto15-011a
Click to embiggen

This is happening now. This summer.

A little flying robot is going to Pluto, the planet that wasn’t a planet, then it sort of was again.

From the NASA New Horizons page… Read the rest “Science Art: NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft as it passes Pluto and Pluto’s largest moon, Charon, in July 2015, by NASA/JHU APL/SwRI/Steve Gribben.”

Compassion pills.

20 March 2015 grant 0

Science Daily reports on UC Berkeley research into a chemical that makes you a nicer person:

A new study by UC Berkeley and UC San Francisco researchers finds that giving a drug that changes

… Read the rest “Compassion pills.”

Posts pagination

« 1 … 137 138 139 … 284 »

Follow on Bandcamp

Something to Believe In

GRANT: something to believe in

You could write a review of this album here on iTunes.

That would be generous.

Fellow Travelers

  • 314.Action
  • Bioephemera
  • Breakfast in the Ruins
  • Carabus
  • Discover
  • Fluxblog
  • Giant-Killer
  • grant (archive)
  • grant (bandcamp)
  • Hello, Poindexter!
  • ideonexus
  • junior kitchen
  • Keep Your Pebbles
  • LiveScience
  • Mindless Ones
  • Nature
  • New Scientist
  • NIMBioS: Science Songwriters-in-Residence
  • Peculiar Velocity
  • PhysOrg
  • Science Daily
  • Science Magazine
  • Science News
  • Science Writers Daily
  • Scientific American
  • Singing Science Records
  • Songfight!
  • Space.com
  • Stereo Sanctity
  • The Great Beyond
  • The Other Adam Ford
  • The Periodic Table of Poetry
  • Voyages Extraordinaires

Tags

acoustics aeronautics agronomy anatomy anthropology archaeology astronomy biochemistry biology botany chemistry climatology computer science ecology economics electrical engineering electronics engineering entomology epidemiology evolution genetics geology linguistics marine biology mathematics medicine meteorology microbiology microscopy nanotechnology neurology oceanography optics paleontology pharmacology physics psychology quantum physics research robotics sociology space exploration theremin zoology
RSS Help Wanted: ScienceCareers
  • Baylor College of Medicine: Postdoctoral Associate - Neuroscience
  • Ellison Institute of Technology: (Senior) Group Leader, Advanced Genome Technologies - Plant Biology Institute
  • University of Minnesota: Dean, College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences and Director, MAES
  • NIAID, NIH: Staff Scientist
  • University of California, San Francisco: Faculty Positions - Institute for Human Genetics
  • Boston University - Biology: Lecturer in Cell & Molecular Genetics
Honorary Troubadours
  • Jonathan Coulton, Contributing Troubadour for Popular Science.
  • Laura Veirs, who knows her way around a polysyllable.
  • Thomas Dolby, godfather of scientific pop.
  • Squeaky, fact-based rock about fusion containment & rocket science.
  • Cosmos II, a.k.a. Boston University astronomer Alan Marscher.
  • Dr. Fiorella Terenzi, astrophysicist who makes music from cosmic radio sources.
  • Dr. Jim Webb, astronomy professor and acoustic guitarist.
  • Artichoke, the band behind 26 Scientists, Vols. I and II.
  • They Might Be Giants, unrelenting proponents of scientific popular song.
  • Symphonies of Science, the people who make Carl Sagan and others sing.
  • Giant Squid, doom metal about the sublime horrors of marine biology.
  • Gethan Dick,6 scientists, 6 musicians, 1 great album
Related Projects
  • Squid Pro Crow
  • Grant Bandcamp
  • Grant Soundcloud
  • Penitential Originals Playlist
https://guildofscientifictroubadours.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/01-gravity-song.mp3

 
"Is it a fact—or have I dreamt it—that, by means of electricity, the world of matter has become a great nerve, vibrating thousands of miles in a breathless point of time?"
— Nathaniel Hawthorne, The House of the Seven Gables, 1851

grant balfour made this website.

Member institution: Duct Tape Aesthetic Laboratories
Tools
  • Subscribe via Email
     
  • View as PDF (via FiveFingers)
     
  • Is Facebook Electric?
     
  •   Yes, yes, we RSS!

     
Fields of Inquiry
  • Cold Storage
  • Featured
  • Guild Affairs
  • Music
    • Songs
      • Penitential Covers
  • Science
    • Science Art

Copyright © 2026 | WordPress Theme by MH Themes

Social Media Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com