The Guild of Scientific Troubadours

The Guild of Scientific Troubadours

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Science

Sick of high crime? Support welfare. New study shows a dramatic link.

7 June 2022 grant 0

EurekAlert! posts a peer-reviewed study published in the Quarterly Journal of Economics that shows a “quite dramatic” correlation between the removal of welfare and an … Read the rest “Sick of high crime? Support welfare. New study shows a dramatic link.”

Scientific illustration of a star spinning

Science Art: Artist’s concept of the fastest rotating star (VFTS 102), by NASA/ESA and G. Bacon (STScI).

6 June 2022 grant 0

This is a star spinning at 2 million kilometers per hour – so fast, it has made itself into its own twirling skirt, its own hula hoop, its own dervish robe.

As the European Space Agency… Read the rest “Science Art: Artist’s concept of the fastest rotating star (VFTS 102), by NASA/ESA and G. Bacon (STScI).”

The brain is not a blank slate. Here’s how it shapes what you see, what you don’t see, and what you think you know.

2 June 2022 grant 0

Scientific American looks at looking at. That is, the magazine – through an essay by systems neuroscientist György Buzsáki – surveys how it is that the human mind detects the… Read the rest “The brain is not a blank slate. Here’s how it shapes what you see, what you don’t see, and what you think you know.”

The first animal communities are way, way older than you might think. (And weirder, too.)

1 June 2022 grant 0

They had strange, branching forms, says Popular Science as they look over fossils from Newfoundland. And they took off centuries before the so-called “Cambrian explosion”… Read the rest “The first animal communities are way, way older than you might think. (And weirder, too.)”

Voyager 1, the world’s most faraway space probe, is sending back weird signals.

30 May 2022 grant 0

Space.com is calling the mysterious set of signals a “telemetry issue,” and experts say it shouldn’t be surprising that an interstellar ship launched 45 years ago … Read the rest “Voyager 1, the world’s most faraway space probe, is sending back weird signals.”

Scientific illustration of an auk, as the title page for the American Ornithologists' Union journal The Auk, from the early 20th century

Science Art: Title Page, The Auk, Vol. XXXI, 1914.

29 May 2022 grant 0

The American Ornithologists’ Union published a journal called The Auk in 1914, with articles in it like “A Plea for the Conservation of the Eider,” and “The Fallacy… Read the rest “Science Art: Title Page, The Auk, Vol. XXXI, 1914.”

Reading the DNA from Pompeii

29 May 2022 grant 0

BBC reports on a study reassembling the genome of a man and woman preserved for centuries under the ash of Pompeii, and what the ancient DNA can teach us today:

The two people were first discovered

… Read the rest “Reading the DNA from Pompeii”

“Looty”: using NFTs to steal back looted African artworks, digitally.

25 May 2022 grant 0

Reuters describes the Looty Project as one man’s crusade to finance new artists in Nigeria and Benin by selling NFTs minted from 3D images of looted artifacts displayed in European… Read the rest ““Looty”: using NFTs to steal back looted African artworks, digitally.”

Scientific illustration of a Siemens star, a pattern used to calibrate optical equipment. It's a resolution tester.

Science Art: Power spectrum of Siemens star with 1024 line pairs per image height, by Bautsch, 2012.

22 May 2022 grant 0

This is a Siemens star, a pattern used to calibrate optical equipment – to see how well the lens (or raster, or driver, or whatever) can see. Although actually, this graphic is not merely… Read the rest “Science Art: Power spectrum of Siemens star with 1024 line pairs per image height, by Bautsch, 2012.”

It feels less evil the second time around.

20 May 2022 grant 0

The Journal of Experimental Psychology defines something I think we’ve all had a feeling about – that the more you encounter a bad deed (or hear it described in, say, a televised… Read the rest “It feels less evil the second time around.”

Laugh, quantum computer, laugh… in IBM’s gum tree.

16 May 2022 grant 0

Popular Science discusses what could be IBM’s quantum breakthrough – a quantum processor named “Kookaburra” that’s set to start computing in 2025:… Read the rest “Laugh, quantum computer, laugh… in IBM’s gum tree.”

Scientific illustration of a ""Sinuous neck flask employed by M. Pasteur in his experiments against spontaneous generation"; in other words, antique laboratory glassware.

Science Art: “Ballon à col sinueux employé par M. Pasteur dans ses expériences contre la génération spontanée”, 1873.

16 May 2022 grant 0

This is some laboratory glassware used in Pasteur’s experiments, as illustrated in Les merveilles de l’industrie, an 1873 science book that has a marvelous gallery on Flickr… Read the rest “Science Art: “Ballon à col sinueux employé par M. Pasteur dans ses expériences contre la génération spontanée”, 1873.”

Bats mimic buzzing hornets to scare predators away.

12 May 2022 grant 0

Science magazine reveals the first known case of a mammal mimicking insect noises, in a study that found greater mouse-eared bats imitate stinging insect buzzes to keep owls and other potential… Read the rest “Bats mimic buzzing hornets to scare predators away.”

Pop-song paradox: What it takes to be a one-hit wonder is the opposite of what it takes to have a long career.

11 May 2022 grant 0

Science News examines the science of the Top 40, with a survey of the charts that found what goes into that first, breakthrough hit is the opposite of what makes for an ongoing musical career… Read the rest “Pop-song paradox: What it takes to be a one-hit wonder is the opposite of what it takes to have a long career.”

Scientific illustration of transistors, as a piece of modern art from a 1972 Radio Shack instructional book.

Science Art: Cover, Introduction to Transistors & Transistor Projects, 1972.

8 May 2022 grant 0

This is… well, let me just quote the preface:

This book is intended to show the electronics experimenter how the transistor was developed, how it is manufactured, and how it works.

… Read the rest “Science Art: Cover, Introduction to Transistors & Transistor Projects, 1972.”

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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)
  • 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
  • Medical College of Wisconsin: Cancer Biology Research Program Co-Leader
  • University of Massachusetts Lowell: Clinical Faculty (Open Rank) & Medical Laboratory Science (MLS) Program Director
  • Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai: Chair, Nash Family Department of Neuroscience
  • The New York Academy of Sciences: Associate Director, Fellowships & Professional Learning
  • Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Neuroscience: Instructor (Research)
  • UChicago: Research Assistant Professor
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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