Monday, November 6, 2017
Tuesday, October 10, 2017
Monday, April 3, 2017
"Psychological Physics" or "Human Physics"
Пытаюсь найти название для раздела физики, который бы развивал физические теории исходя из физической и психологической природы человека. Чтобы наука физика на самом деле развивала способности человека успешно существовать в этом мире через его понимание. Чтобы формулируемые законы физики были человеку интуитивно понятны и естественны. Прикинул названия "психологическая физика" или "человеческая физика", но эти названия уже закреплены за какими-то научными разделами.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/900321603377111/permalink/1312111608864773/
Saturday, February 4, 2017
ScienceDaily: Strange Science News
ScienceDaily: Strange Science News |
Wired for sound: Enraging noises caused by brain connection overdrive Posted: 03 Feb 2017 05:51 AM PST While many of us may find the sounds of chewing or breathing off-putting, for some they're unbearable -- and new research has shown their brains are going into overdrive. |
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Thursday, February 2, 2017
ScienceDaily: Strange Science News
ScienceDaily: Strange Science News |
- Advanced robotic bat's flight characteristics simulates the real thing
- Good ribbance: Dinosaur rib bones reveal remnants of 195-million-year-old protein
- Reversible saliva allows frogs to hang on to next meal
- Transparent gel-based robots can catch and release live fish
- Scientists design electricity generator that mimics trees
- How water can split into two liquids below zero
Advanced robotic bat's flight characteristics simulates the real thing Posted: 01 Feb 2017 12:06 PM PST Researchers have developed a self-contained robotic bat -- dubbed Bat Bot (B2) -- with soft, articulated wings that can mimic the key flight mechanisms of biological bats. |
Good ribbance: Dinosaur rib bones reveal remnants of 195-million-year-old protein Posted: 01 Feb 2017 11:09 AM PST Is fossilized rock all that remains when a dinosaur decomposes? New research provides the first evidence that proteins have been preserved within the 195-million-year-old rib of the sauropodomorph dinosaur Lufengosaurus. |
Reversible saliva allows frogs to hang on to next meal Posted: 01 Feb 2017 08:06 AM PST A frog tongue's stickiness is caused by a reversible saliva in combination with a super soft tongue, new research shows. A frog's saliva is thick and sticky during prey capture, then turns thin and watery as prey is removed inside the mouth. |
Transparent gel-based robots can catch and release live fish Posted: 01 Feb 2017 06:26 AM PST Engineers have fabricated transparent, gel-based robots that move when water is pumped in and out of them. The bots can perform a number of fast, forceful tasks, including kicking a ball underwater, and grabbing and releasing a live fish. |
Scientists design electricity generator that mimics trees Posted: 31 Jan 2017 09:43 AM PST A prototype biomimetic tree has been built that generates electricity when wind blows through its artificial leaves. The researchers think such technology may help people charge household appliances without the need for large wind turbines. |
How water can split into two liquids below zero Posted: 25 Jan 2017 09:07 AM PST Did you know that water can still remain liquid below zero degrees Celsius? It is called supercooled water and is present in refrigerators. At even smaller temperatures, supercooled water could exist as a cocktail of two distinct liquids. Unfortunately, the presence of ice often prevents us from observing this phenomenon. So physicists had the idea of replicating the tetrahedral shape of water molecules and thus removing the interference of ice formation. |
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Wednesday, February 1, 2017
ScienceDaily: Strange Science News
ScienceDaily: Strange Science News |
- 'Ghost particles' could improve understanding the universe
- Spider silk demonstrates Spider man-like abilities
- How stressful will a trip to Mars be on the human body?
- Engineered intrinsically disordered proteins provide biomedical insights
- Boxer crabs acquire anemones by stealing from each other, and splitting them into clones
- Sound waves create whirlpools to round up tiny signs of disease
- Exceptionally preserved Jurassic sea life found in new fossil site
'Ghost particles' could improve understanding the universe Posted: 31 Jan 2017 11:56 AM PST New measurements of neutrino oscillations, observed at the IceCube Neutrino Observatory at the South Pole, have shed light on outstanding questions regarding fundamental properties of neutrinos. The findings could help fill key gaps in the Standard Model, the theory that describes the behavior of fundamental particles at every energy scale scientists have been able to measure. |
Spider silk demonstrates Spider man-like abilities Posted: 31 Jan 2017 07:44 AM PST Spider silk offers new inspiration for developments in artificial muscle technology. The silk of the Ornithoctonus Huwena spider demonstrates impressive weight-lifting abilities with efficient, water-driven actuation. |
How stressful will a trip to Mars be on the human body? Posted: 31 Jan 2017 06:31 AM PST Preliminary research results for the NASA Twins Study debuted at NASA's Human Research Program's annual Investigators' Workshop in Galveston, Texas the week of Jan. 23. NASA astronaut Scott Kelly returned home last March after nearly one year in space living on the International Space Station. His identical twin brother, Mark, remained on Earth. |
Engineered intrinsically disordered proteins provide biomedical insights Posted: 31 Jan 2017 06:31 AM PST Biomedical researchers have engineered the first examples of biomimetic structures composed from a mysterious class of proteins that lack any sort of internal structure. Researchers reveal the ability to control the self-assembly and disassembly of these structures in an organized manner. |
Boxer crabs acquire anemones by stealing from each other, and splitting them into clones Posted: 31 Jan 2017 04:51 AM PST Researchers have described a little known yet fascinating aspect of the behavior of Lybia crabs, a species which holds sea anemones in each of its claws (behavior which has earnt it the nickname 'boxer' or 'pom-pom' crab). In a series of experiments, they showed that when these crabs need an anemone, they will fight to steal one from another crab and then both crabs will split their anemone into two, creating identical clones. |
Sound waves create whirlpools to round up tiny signs of disease Posted: 26 Jan 2017 08:36 AM PST Mechanical engineers have demonstrated a tiny whirlpool that can concentrate nanoparticles using nothing but sound. The innovation could gather proteins and other biological structures from blood or urine samples for future diagnostic devices. |
Exceptionally preserved Jurassic sea life found in new fossil site Posted: 25 Jan 2017 11:58 AM PST A trove of exceptionally preserved Jurassic marine fossils discovered in Canada, rare for recording soft-bodied species that normally don't fossilize, is expanding scientists' view of the rich marine life of the period. |
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