-
8 votes
-
At the limits of thought: Science today stands at a crossroads--will its progress be driven by human minds or by the machines that we’ve created?
3 votes -
Elisabeth Bik quit her job to spot errors in research papers — and has become the public face of image sleuthing
9 votes -
A new type of chemical bond: The charge-shift bond
5 votes -
How much is a human life actually worth?
6 votes -
Iceland has a record of its people's ancestry going back 1,000 years – it's given the country an advantage into understanding the genetic makeup of coronavirus
6 votes -
US Geological Survey volcano news
9 votes -
Inside curved spaces
5 votes -
Chemistry is dangerous
7 votes -
Smallpox and the long road to eradication
6 votes -
Greenland's Grand Canyon – UMass Amherst and the University of Copenhagen's Centre for Ice & Climate propose a new mechanism for how the megacanyon formed
7 votes -
Predictability: Can the turning point and end of an expanding epidemic be precisely forecast?
7 votes -
Ask a cosmology PhD student (almost) anything!
Hi all, I am a PhD student focusing in cosmology. I wanted to up the science content here on Tildes, and I thought that one way to do so is to have an informal little Q&A session. As such, feel...
Hi all,
I am a PhD student focusing in cosmology. I wanted to up the science content here on Tildes, and I thought that one way to do so is to have an informal little Q&A session. As such, feel free to use this post to ask any questions you might have about cosmology specifically, and physics in general.
This may not be as exciting as some other science AMAs given that I am a rather early graduate student, so there may be a lot of questions I don't know the answer to. However, I'm willing to try my best and answer over the next few days, and to let you know I don't know if I don't!
A bit about myself: I did my undergraduate degree at the University of Chicago where I studied physics and mathematics, and then I was a student researcher in a computational cosmology group at a national lab. I subsequently enrolled at UC Davis to continue studying cosmology. Ask me anything about physics, cosmology, or high performance computing!
I also invite anyone else with expertise to chime in as well!
23 votes -
Why are clinical trials so complicated?
3 votes -
VR video of a nuclear explosion [Trigger warning for being generally unsettling]
11 votes -
About 14,650 years ago, sea level jumped twelve meters in just a few centuries—a puzzling past sea level rise might have its missing piece
8 votes -
Fruit trenches: Cultivating subtropical plants in freezing temperatures
7 votes -
Periodic functions
Does there exist a function that does not include any trigonometric function in its definition that has similar properties (periodicity, for instance) as trigonometric functions? I can't think of...
Does there exist a function that does not include any trigonometric function in its definition that has similar properties (periodicity, for instance) as trigonometric functions? I can't think of any, and this strikes me as a bit surprising.
Edit: I thought of a simple answer: piecewise functions can achieve this!
6 votes -
Richard Feynman: Making the extraordinary look easy
5 votes -
Scientists make mistakes. I made a big one
10 votes -
Why do so few people major in computer science?
15 votes -
Quantum steampunk: 19th-century science meets technology of today
5 votes -
Finally we may have a path to the fundamental theory of physics… and it’s beautiful
28 votes -
COVID-19 kills renowned Princeton mathematician, 'Game Of Life' inventor John Conway in three days
26 votes -
Making aerogel
6 votes -
Volume of a sphere
5 votes -
Awakening volcanic region in Iceland could cause disruption for centuries – Reykjanes peninsula's last active period started in 10th century and lasted 300 years
6 votes -
More than thirty million years ago, monkeys rafted across the Atlantic to South America
12 votes -
Nature to join open-access Plan S, publisher says
10 votes -
Scientists isolate bacterial enzyme that rapidly breaks down plastic polymers into recyclable components
6 votes -
A Google plan to wipe out mosquitoes appears to be working
12 votes -
A parallelogram puzzle
3 votes -
Australian scientists have made a test to check who is likely to develop coronavirus
3 votes -
Shimmering schools of fish have dazzled scientists for centuries with their synchronized maneuvers. Now, high-speed video is revealing how—and why—they do it
6 votes -
Remdesivir, one of the experimental coronavirus drugs, is a royal pain to make
5 votes -
Scientists in Melbourne are testing a drug used to fight parasitic worms and bugs – in the hope of destroying coronavirus
3 votes -
Physical force alone spurs gene expression, study reveals
8 votes -
What’s a virus, anyway? Part 1: The bare-bones basics.
7 votes -
Linear Algebra Done Right - Free electronic version
9 votes -
World-first tool to help medicos detect COVID-19 could save 'thousands of lives'
3 votes -
Are we ready for quantum computers?
3 votes -
Smarter individuals engage in more prosocial behavior in daily life, study finds
3 votes -
Labs are euthanizing thousands of mice in response to coronavirus pandemic
10 votes -
Hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin as a treatment of COVID-19: results of an open-label non-randomized clinical trial
10 votes -
Microbial life has been found deep in Earth's crust beneath the ocean floor
8 votes -
Chloroquine, past and present
3 votes -
New blood tests for antibodies could show true scale of coronavirus pandemic
8 votes -
The Trump administration drove him back to China, where he invented a fast coronavirus test
4 votes -
Testing the efficacy of homemade masks: Would they protect in an influenza pandemic?
8 votes -
An ancient Elpistostege fish fossil found in Miguasha, Canada has revealed new insights into how the human hand evolved from fish fins
5 votes