The Guild of Scientific Troubadours

The Guild of Scientific Troubadours

ex scientia, sono

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Science

Crab chips for a living computer.

13 April 2012 grant 0

New Scientist blogs about the ultimate Rube Goldberg cybernetic machine – a computer that uses living crabs for processors:

Yukio-Pegio Gunji of Kobe University in Japan and colleagues

… Read the rest “Crab chips for a living computer.”

Where intelligence is in the brain.

12 April 2012 grant 0

Medical Xpress sketches out a rough map of where intelligence actually resides:

Their study, published in Brain: A Journal of Neurology, is unique in that it enlisted an extraordinary

… Read the rest “Where intelligence is in the brain.”

Cool nanotubes.

11 April 2012 grant 0

PhysOrg unveils the guts of the next supercomputer breakthrough – with carbon nanotubes that, curiously, make things nearby get hot while they stay cool:

For the UMD researchers,

… Read the rest “Cool nanotubes.”

Armor-plated plankton getting weaker. And so is the planet.

10 April 2012 grant 0

The world’s future supply of chalk is threatened by global warming. That’s what I take away from this LiveScience report on how the souring of the ocean is weakening plankton… Read the rest “Armor-plated plankton getting weaker. And so is the planet.”

About those CEO bonuses: How financial incentives make us less creative.

9 April 2012 grant 1

Nature blogger Graham Morehead isn’t looking over any new research with this post, which makes it all the more remarkable. Since the early 1960s, we’ve known that offering… Read the rest “About those CEO bonuses: How financial incentives make us less creative.”

Science Art: Where the sun sets twice, by NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hunt

8 April 2012 grant 0


Click to embiggen

This is an image of a transit of Kepler 16. What that means is that, from where we’re sitting, it looks like the 16th planet discovered by the Kepler mission is moving… Read the rest “Science Art: Where the sun sets twice, by NASA / JPL-Caltech / R. Hunt”

Living snail batteries – and backyard spies.

6 April 2012 grant 0

Science Daily creeps us out with a military-funded project that’s turning snails into living batteries:

The electrified snail, being a biotechnological living device, was able

… Read the rest “Living snail batteries – and backyard spies.”

The moon is not so lonely.

5 April 2012 grant 0

PhysOrg says our moon has lots of company – little “minimoons” are always stopping by for an orbital visit:

Mikael Granvik (formerly at UH Manoa and now at Helsinki),

… Read the rest “The moon is not so lonely.”

Senators demand giant blimp. (No, really.)

4 April 2012 grant 0

Wired’s Danger Room takes a long look at the Blue Devil project – a 370-foot-long airship that, if some legislators have their way, will be flying over Afghanistan soon:

At

… Read the rest “Senators demand giant blimp. (No, really.)”

Something is killing lots of dolphins in the Gulf.

3 April 2012 grant 0

Discovery News says the 714 reported dolphin deaths are just the tip of a much larger iceberg:

NOAA declared the die-off an “Unusual Mortality Event” as per the Marine Mammal Protection

… Read the rest “Something is killing lots of dolphins in the Gulf.”

The world’s first winemakers were the world’s first beekeepers.

2 April 2012 grant 1

They lived in the Republic of Georgia, says Eurasianet.org, where scientists have just found 5,500-year-old honeypots:

The honey stains found in the ceramic vessels, found 170 kilometers

… Read the rest “The world’s first winemakers were the world’s first beekeepers.”

Science Art: A red blood cell in a capillary, pancreatic tissue – TEM, by Louisa Howard

1 April 2012 grant 0


Click to embiggen

Happy blood. April fool blood. Pancreas blood. Turning sweetness to pep blood. Smiling blood.

Very, very enlarged blood.

Image from Wikimedia Commons.

World’s largest laser gets just a little larger (and closer to making fusion happen).

30 March 2012 grant 0

Scientific American makes me jealous of the physicists at Livermore’s National Ignition Facility, who get to utter orders like, “Now, my assistants! Fire the FUSION LASER!”… Read the rest “World’s largest laser gets just a little larger (and closer to making fusion happen).”

The hands ARE NOT CLEAN! (Or: how germs could cause OCD.)

29 March 2012 grant 0

New Scientist reveals a possible irony of microbiology. It could be that obsessive-compulsive disorder – in which the brain gets stuck in loops of repetitive, ritualistic activity,… Read the rest “The hands ARE NOT CLEAN! (Or: how germs could cause OCD.)”

Grampa Worm!

28 March 2012 grant 0

PhysOrg greets our oldest known ancestor – a very special worm:

Researchers from the University of Cambridge, University of Toronto and the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) have confirmed

… Read the rest “Grampa Worm!”

Posts pagination

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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)
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  • 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
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  • 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

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RSS Help Wanted: ScienceCareers
  • Max Planck Society: Max Planck-Weizmann Postdoctoral Programme
  • The Ohio State University: Director of Research and Analytics - Dept of Biomedical Informatics and GRC
  • Baylor College of Medicine: Research Associate - Cardiovascular Biology
  • Ellison Institute of Technology: (Senior) Group Leader, Advanced Genome Technologies - Plant Biology Institute
  • Baylor College of Medicine: Postdoctoral Associate - Neuroscience
  • Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso -Department of Molecular and Translational Medicine : Assistant Professor or Higher (Cancer Research)
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
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