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23 votes
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What one Finnish church learned from creating a service almost entirely with AI – tools wrote the sermons and some of the songs, composed the music and created some the visuals
11 votes -
Scientists have bred "Woolly Mice" on their journey to bring back the mammoth
40 votes -
Kids at-home science experiments (of the less tame variety)
My 5-year-old loves doing “science experiments” at home with me and her older siblings, but it seems that the online lists of experiments we’re choosing from are truncated to leave off all but the...
My 5-year-old loves doing “science experiments” at home with me and her older siblings, but it seems that the online lists of experiments we’re choosing from are truncated to leave off all but the least dangerous activities. This makes sense for a lot of low-parental-involvement contexts, but I’m going to be directing and deeply involved in these experiments. And I want fire. Smoke. Sparks. I want to make these experiments feel adventurous so the kids get really excited about whatever we’re learning. Baking soda and vinegar volcanoes and elephant toothpaste just don’t cut it.
What experiments can you recommend using only relatively common household materials? Chemicals, candles, electricity, a stovetop, etc. (Assume that the experimenters will all be taking standard precautions, wearing PPE, and generally using the experiments as both an opportunity to learn about science and about the safety measures that go with science experimentation.)
Or if you know of any websites listing these more spectacular home science experiments, please share those as well.
Bonus if the experiments involve multiple possible outcomes that the kid can use pen and paper and elementary math to predict in advance.
28 votes -
Two sides of the same coin
I have a quandary. Suppose there is a coin that, when flipped, it lands head’s side up on a table. Without picking the coin up to confirm the side that is down is tails. Could you ever know that...
I have a quandary.
Suppose there is a coin that, when flipped, it lands head’s side up on a table.
Without picking the coin up to confirm the side that is down is tails. Could you ever know that it is tails ?
Assume in this world that the coin has a heads side and tails side when held in your hand.
Assume you cannot view the coin’s two sides in any other way than picking it up.
Is this just a variation of Schrödinger’s Cat ? Or is it more “does a tree make a sound if no one is around to hear it” ?
11 votes -
The world’s first wooden satellite was launched into space, will begin testing in December
17 votes -
Thirty-year species reintroduction experiment shows evolution unfolding in slow motion
15 votes -
New experimental evidence shows lack of employment effects of guaranteed income
20 votes -
Making an atomic trampoline
13 votes -
What happens when you touch a Pickle to an AM radio tower?
36 votes -
Weird Weapons: Caged Buckler - Sword trapper
12 votes -
Maglev titanium heart now whirs inside the chest of a live patient
24 votes -
Vibe Check - Let AI find you the best things
30 votes -
Microsoft shelves its underwater data center — Project Natick had fewer server failures compared to servers on land
20 votes -
Gilead shot prevents all HIV cases in trial of African women
29 votes -
US economists report on an intervention that helps low-income families beat the poverty trap
17 votes -
Science fiction writer Ursula K. Le Guin made Schrödinger’s cat famous
12 votes -
"Sword breakers" were rare and we don't know much about them. How were they used and what were they really for? Two experienced rapier fencers experiment with one to discover more about them.
11 votes -
Frozen human brain tissue was successfully revived for the first time
34 votes -
Safer Sunscreen: Stanford researchers explore novel approach to sustainable sun protection
13 votes -
On-demand nutrient production system for long-duration space missions
12 votes -
Bizarre traveling flame discovery
11 votes -
Proving the Earth is round at home
I am looking for practical ways to prove the Earth is round using materials accessible to the average person. I have zero interest in disproving Flat Earth folks. I am inspired by Dan Olson's...
I am looking for practical ways to prove the Earth is round using materials accessible to the average person. I have zero interest in disproving Flat Earth folks.
I am inspired by Dan Olson's (Folding Ideas) excellent video where he is able to do this measuring the curvature of a lake near his home that has a very specific geography that lends itself to this sort of experiment. I've seen all sorts of ways to prove this measuring shadows and poles, using gyroscopes, etc. and wanted to know if there are any practical guides for proving once and for all that the Earth is round for yourself relying on nothing more than experimentation.
What I'm not looking for:
- Math relying on flight times/charts
- Video/picture evidence
- Deductive proofs built on agreed upon premises
- Expensive tests
- Extremely time consuming projects
- Underwhelming results (relying on a probabilistic argument for a round Earth from the evidence.)
What I am looking for:
- Practical experiments
- Things I could potentially do without spending much money
- Tests that aren't largely comprised of accepting someone else's research
- Potentially math-heavy evidence
- Results that are strong and conclusive
I've thought of finding some easy to test version of Eratosthenes' proof using two poles. I've also thought about using a balloon and sending something to space like what is done in this Tom Scott video. Nothing seems well documented in such a way as for me to be able to follow it at home.
TL;DR: I think it would be a meaningful experience to have the power to prove the Earth is round by myself, for myself. I can only compare this desire to the desire a child with a telescope has when wishing to observe Saturn or Mars themselves for the first time. It's not to prove anything or to settle doubts, but for the personal value of independently observing this astronomical fact oneself.
17 votes -
From ‘crookies’ to flavored versions: The French croissant reinvents itself to battle American snacks and attract Gen Z
21 votes -
Scientists studied how cicadas pee. Their insights could shed light on fluid dynamics.
7 votes -
Classic classroom toy 'dippy bird' inspires scientists to build electricity generator
9 votes -
First Light fusion startup breaks pressure record using giant ‘gun’ machine for projectile fusion attempts
13 votes -
Join Brad Leone as he travels to Dublin, Ireland and gets a special, VIP behind-the-scenes tour at the world famous Guinness Factory | Local Legends
9 votes -
What are your cooking experiments that haven't turned out well?
When I first joined Tildes I posted about weird food combos, with mine being a cheese and tuna omelette (try it! It's protein rich and it works!). Lately I've really been getting into tinned...
When I first joined Tildes I posted about weird food combos, with mine being a cheese and tuna omelette (try it! It's protein rich and it works!). Lately I've really been getting into tinned salmon so I thought I'd throw some of that into an omelette along with some chives, wilted spinach and a bit of soft cheese. I figured it'd have an eggs royale vibe to it.
It was... fine? I guess? Not inedible, but not great. Normally I love the soft, chalky bones in tinned salmon because I'm a horrid little goblin but here they were just an unpleasant distraction. 4/10, won't try again. Whether it's something pretty tame and low stakes like mine or a total, unsalvageable disaster, I'd love to hear what didn't work out for you!
32 votes -
Researchers were able to isolate the brain from the rest of the body of a pig, and kept it alive and functioning for five hours
59 votes -
Elon Musk's Neuralink implants brain chip in first human
35 votes -
Can ‘micro-acts of joy’ make you happier? I tried them for seven days.
11 votes -
What the Prisoner's Dilemma reveals about life, the Universe, and everything
32 votes -
For millennia, Tyrian purple was the most valuable colour on the planet. Then the recipe to make it was lost. By piecing together ancient clues, could one man bring it back?
35 votes -
I tried painting with the legendary anime paints, Nicker Poster Colours
6 votes -
NASA's 3D-printed detonation engine revs up for four minutes in breakthrough test
33 votes -
Scientists explain why ‘doing your own research’ leads to believing conspiracies
42 votes -
Watch gravity pull two metal balls together
9 votes -
If we shoot a 140lb draw weight English longbow from a five story medieval tower, how much further will the arrows go?
13 votes -
Shocking study discovers bottlenose dolphins possess electric sixth sense
11 votes -
A 1990 experiment to test whether we could discern life on Earth remotely
9 votes -
The first results from the world’s biggest basic income experiment
49 votes -
World’s biggest experimental nuclear fusion reactor launched in Japan
21 votes -
What cheese makes the best Mac & Cheese?
10 votes -
Making bulletproof wood
16 votes -
UK's nuclear fusion site (JET) ends experiments after forty years
18 votes -
Wirtz pumps are really clever
16 votes -
Attosecond lasers explained (2023 Nobel Prize in physics)
6 votes -
We might have accidentally killed any life we collected in samples on Mars nearly fifty years ago
43 votes -
ALPHA experiment at CERN observes the influence of gravity on antimatter
24 votes