Sunday, April 6, 2025

Meteorological Mayhem


Running a planet gets harder every year. 

Solar geoengineering could save 400,000 lives a year
Dec 2024, phys.org

Stratospheric aerosol injection for 1 degree of cooling could save 400,000 lives, outweighing deaths caused by solar geoengineering's direct health risks from air pollution and ozone depletion by a factor of 13.

via Georgia Institute of Technology School of Public Policy, Princeton, University of Chicago: Anthony Harding et al, Impact of solar geoengineering on temperature-attributable mortality, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2024). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2401801121



Enhanced weathering could transform US agriculture for atmospheric CO₂ removal
Feb 2025, phys.org

This is the flip side to the stratospheric injection style geoengineering:

Enhanced weathering - adding crushed basalt to soils using existing agricultural infrastructure; the basalt reacts with CO2, taking it out of the air; it also could improve air quality by interacting with the soil nitrogen cycling processes to reduce the formation of ozone and fine particulate matter.

via Leverhulme Center for Climate Change Mitigation, University of Sheffield: David J. Beerling et al, Transforming US agriculture for carbon removal with enhanced weathering, Nature (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08429-2


Ocean-surface warming has more than quadrupled since the late-1980s, study shows
Jan 2025, phys.org

Ocean temperatures were rising at about 0.06 degrees Celsius per decade in the late 1980s, but are now increasing at 0.27 degrees Celsius per decade, a quadrupling.

Global ocean temperatures hit record highs for 450 days straight in 2023 and early 2024. Some of this warmth came from El Niño, a natural warming event in the Pacific.

When scientists compared it to a similar El Niño in 2015–16, they found that the rest of the record warmth is explained by the sea surface warming up faster in the past 10 years than in earlier decades; 44% of the record warmth was attributable to the oceans absorbing heat at an accelerating rate.

Expect more warming ... 

via University of Reading: Quantifying the acceleration of multidecadal global sea surface warming driven by Earth's energy imbalance, Environmental Research Letters (2025). DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/adaa8a


Scientists highlight alarming rise in marine heat waves worldwide
Mar 2025, phys.org

One group of researchers found that the number of such heat waves in 2023–2024 was 240% higher than any other year in recorded history.

(fyi: "Prior research has also shown that abnormally high water temperatures can lead to dolphins and whales swimming closer to shore than normal".)

via Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, Climate Change Research Centre, Centre for Marine Science & Innovation and ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate Extremes, University of New South Wales: Kathryn E. Smith et al, Ocean extremes as a stress test for marine ecosystems and society, Nature Climate Change (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41558-025-02269-2


Extreme ocean heat does not mean climate change is accelerating
Mar 2025, phys.org

As opposed to being a sign that our models are all wrong and we absolutely helpless, they say it could be a 500-year event, but according to our current climate not the historical climate, which means it could become more like a 100-year event. 

via University of Bern: Jens Terhaar et al, Record sea surface temperature jump in 2023–2024 unlikely but not unexpected, Nature (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-08674-z

Saturday, April 5, 2025

Post Consumerist Paradise


With the Shopocalypse imminent, the Church of Stop Shopping is the only church to gain congregants in the past ten years. 

When TikTok's underconsumption trend meets festive excess
Dec 2024, BBC News

There is a topic trending on a popular social media platform that celebrates "underconsumption", i.e., buying fewer unnecessary things and making the products you already own go further.

(This is around the Christmas holiday btw, 10% of the United States economy.)

"Trying to reduce consumption goes against the norms of consumer culture."

That is all.



Economic inequality is a powerful predictor of democratic erosion
Jan 2025, phys.org

Economic inequality is one of the strongest predictors of where and when democracy erodes—even wealthy and longstanding democracies are vulnerable if they are highly unequal.

via University of Chicago: Eli G. Rau et al, Income inequality and the erosion of democracy in the twenty-first century, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2024). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2422543121

Friday, April 4, 2025

Making Materials Progress


Make it stop: 

'Living' ceramics utilize bacteria for gas sensing and carbon capture
Dec 2024, phys.org

The work involved first 3D printing stacked, ceramic, spiral structures that could stand on their own. The structures were printed with pits on their outer surfaces to give bacteria a place to live. The larger pits were used as a way to channel nutrients to the bacteria.

To further ensure the bacteria could feed for an extended period of time, they set the structures in shallow pools of nutrient solutions. As the water in the solutions evaporated, the nutrients were pulled up to the pits containing the nutrients via capillary action. The bacteria were then allowed to multiply, filling the pores that had been designed for them. Testing showed they could survive without further nutrients for up to two weeks.

The research team used different types of bacteria for different purposes—with photosynthetic cyanobacteria, for example, the structure could serve as a CO2 extraction device, pulling the gas from the air. They also tried Escherichia coli and found that they made the structure a formaldehyde detector.

via ETH Zurich: Alessandro Dutto et al, Living Porous Ceramics for Bacteria‐Regulated Gas Sensing and Carbon Capture, Advanced Materials (2024). DOI: 10.1002/adma.202412555


Self-adjusting shading system mimics pine cones for energy-autonomous weather response
Jan 2025, phys.org

"We are achieving a shading system that opens and closes autonomously in response to changes in the weather, without the need for operational energy or any mechatronic elements. The bio-material structure itself is the machine."

It's based on pine cones. In high humidity, the cellulosic materials absorb moisture and expand, causing the printed elements to curl and open. Conversely, in low humidity, the cellulosic materials release moisture and contract, causing the printed elements to flatten and close.

via University of Stuttgart Institute for Computational Design and Construction: Tiffany Cheng et al, Weather-responsive adaptive shading through biobased and bioinspired hygromorphic 4D-printing, Nature Communications (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-54808-8


Unoccupied housing in China's urban areas emitting massive amounts of carbon, study finds
Mar 2025, phys.org

Prior research has shown that by 2021, approximately 17% of homes built in cities in China were unoccupied. Some in the field have suggested that the number has only grown since then, to between 20 and 65 million unoccupied units. This new research found that approximately 17.4% of all new residential units built between 2001 and 2018 have never been occupied

The total the team came up with was 55.81 million tons of carbon emissions solely due to the unoccupied housing units, which they note represent approximately 6.9% of China's total residential emissions. (One source of emissions is the footprint of the materials, and the second comes from heating and cooling, because most of the units are apartment buildings with central heating and cooling.)

via Tsinghua University: Hefan Zheng et al, Unused housing in urban China and its carbon emission impact, Nature Communications (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-57217-7

Thursday, April 3, 2025

Captain Tying Knots


With all the topological mention these days, we have to ask - whatever happened to knots?

String figures shed light on cultural connections and the roots of mathematical reasoning
Dec 2024, phys.org

String figure games (like cat's cradle or jacob's ladder?) involve the manipulation of a loop of string with the fingers to create complex patterns. The researchers analyzed 826 string figures from 92 cultures around the world. They found 83 recurring designs. The results show that certain figures are globally prevalent. In certain cases, this suggests ancient cultural origins potentially extending back millennia

The researchers applied mathematical knot theory to develop a computational method to create a DNA-like symbolic representation of each string figure. This enables the cross-cultural comparison of string figures and the construction of their "family tree."

via University of Helsinki, Aarhus University, National Museum of Denmark and Seattle University: Roope O. Kaaronen et al, A global cross-cultural analysis of string figures reveals evidence of deep transmission and innovation, Journal of The Royal Society Interface (2024). DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2024.0673

Image credit: Fingers, not bad, not good enough. AI Art - Let Go - 2025

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

The Graphene Zoo

 

From its slightly accidental inception 20 years ago, graphene has now turned into a large branch on the tree of technogenetic life.

Decoding 2D material growth: White graphene insights open doors to cleaner energy and more efficient electronics
Jan 2025, phys.org

White Graphene - the name for hexagonal boron nitride (where you blast out some of the carbon atoms from graphene and fill them with boron nitride instead)

via University of Surrey and Graz University of Technology: Anthony J. R. Payne et al, Unravelling the Epitaxial Growth Mechanism of Hexagonal and Nanoporous Boron Nitride: A First‐Principles Microkinetic Model, Small (2025). DOI: 10.1002/smll.202405404



Graphyne's transformation: A new carbon form with potential for electronics
Feb 2025, phys.org

Graphyne - It's not graphene, it's not carbon like diamonds with its 3-D lattice, it's not like graphite with its 2-D lattice, and it's not graphene with it's 1-D 2-D lattice. It's a 1-D 2-D 3-D lattice. Got it?

via Case Western Reserve University: Ali E. Aliev et al, A planar-sheet nongraphitic zero-bandgap sp2 carbon phase made by the low-temperature reaction of γ-graphyne, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2413194122


Synthetic diamond with hexagonal lattice outshines the natural kind with unprecedented hardness
Feb 2025, phys.org

Synthetic hexagonal diamonds - heating graphene samples to high temperatures while inside a high-pressure chamber. By adjusting the parameters of their setup, the researchers found they could get the graphene to grow into a synthetic diamond with hexagonal lattices.

via Umeå University and materials scientists and engineers affiliated with several institutions in China such as Jilin University: Desi Chen et al, General approach for synthesizing hexagonal diamond by heating post-graphite phases, Nature Materials (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41563-025-02126-9


Olympicene molecular chains create quantum spin systems with spintronics applications
Mar 2025, phys.org

Olympicenes - open-shell nanographenes (shaped like the Olympics logo)

via Max Planck Institute of Microstructure Physics: Chenxiao Zhao et al, Spin excitations in nanographene-based antiferromagnetic spin-1/2 Heisenberg chains, Nature Materials (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41563-025-02166-1

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Headlines From the Front Lines


It may be April Fool's, but the headlines are real.

Iberian nailed head ritual was more complex than expected, isotope analysis reveals
Feb 2025, phys.org

Not trying to be anti-literacy here, it's just that sometimes the headline is all you need. (Although this particular headline below requires the accompanying image.)

via Autonomous University of Barcelona: Rubén de la Fuente-Seoane et al, Territorialisation and human mobility during the Iron Age in NE Iberia: An approach through Isotope Analyses of the Severed Heads from Puig Castellar (Barcelona, Spain) and Ullastret (Girona, Spain), Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.jasrep.2025.105035



Antioxidant carbon dot nanozymes alleviate depression in rats by restoring the gut microbiome
Sep 2024, phys.org

Some headlines just make me feel like how a cracked windshield can become the the quintessential heavy metal band name font, but for like a mad scientist type of science thing. 

via Henan Joint International Research Laboratory of Nanomaterials for Energy and Catalysis at Xuchang University: Huimin Jia et al, Antioxidant Carbon Dots Nanozymes Alleviate Stress-induced Depression by Modulating Gut Microbiota, Langmuir (2024). DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.4c02481


Google reacts angrily to report it will have to sell Chrome
Nov 2024, BBC News


'Alzheimer's in dish' model shows promise for accelerating drug discovery
Nov 2024, phys.org

(Alzheimer's isn't funny but Alzheimer's-in-a-dish is funny.)

via Massachusetts General Hospital: Yeganeah, PN et al. Integrative Pathway Analysis across Humans and 3D Cellular Models Identifies the p38 MAPK-MK2 Axis as a Therapeutic Target for Alzheimer's Disease, Neuron (2024). DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2024.10.029.


Topological quantum processor uses Majorana zero modes for fault-tolerant computing
Feb 2025, phys.org

It's got all the words - majorana fermion, topological things, and quantum computers - but I still don't buy it because it's Microsoft and they lie about shit all the time. In fact, I'm going to assume that specifically because it's a Microsoft press release, that it was engineered to have all these words on purpose. Shall we say, a kind of artificial headline generator trained on hype words more than the actual work that was done. 

(Actual scientists working in academia are not convinced, by the way.)

via UC Santa Barbara and Microsoft Station Q: David Aasen et al, Roadmap to fault tolerant quantum computation using topological qubit arrays, arXiv (2025). DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2502.12252


Biohybrid hand uses sushi-like rolls of lab-grown human muscle to move objects
Feb 2025, phys.org

via University of Tokyo: XINZHU REN et al, Biohybrid hand actuated by multiple human muscle tissues, Science Robotics (2025). DOI: 10.1126/scirobotics.adr5512.


Engineers develop a fully 3D-printed electrospray engine that can power tiny satellites
Feb 2025, phys.org

via MIT: Hyeonseok Kim et al, High‐Impulse, Modular, 3D‐Printed CubeSat Electrospray Thrusters Throttleable via Pressure and Voltage Control, Advanced Science (2025). DOI: 10.1002/advs.202413706

Monday, March 31, 2025

Does It Compute


AKA All Computers All the Time

Right now a computer is a box that sits on your desk. It's plugged in. Maybe it's a little box, one you keep in your pocket. That one's not plugged in, but it does need power. Soon, the computer will not be a thing. Instead, all things will be a computer. Maybe it's better to say that all things will compute. And like instead of saying 'there's an app for that' we might hear instead 'does it compute'? Like, "Can you pass me the paper towel?" "Does it compute?" Or, "Hey I just got a new haircut." "But does it compute?" 

First - The Fiber Computer:

Fiber computer allows apparel to run apps and 'understand' the wearer
Feb 2025, phys.org

It's an autonomous programmable computer in the form of an elastic fiber.

The fiber computer contains a series of microdevices, including sensors, a microcontroller, digital memory, Bluetooth modules, optical communications, and a battery, making up all the necessary components of a computer in a single elastic fiber.

"Our bodies broadcast gigabytes of data through the skin every second in the form of heat, sound, biochemicals, electrical potentials, and light, all of which carry information about our activities, emotions, and health. Unfortunately, most, if not all, of it gets absorbed and then lost in the clothes we wear."

via MIT, RISD, Brown, Stanford, Soldier Nanotechnologies: Yoel Fink, A single-fibre computer enables textile networks and distributed inference, Nature (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08568-6. 



Materials can remember a sequence of events in an unexpected way
Jan 202,5 phys.org

Material memory is like wrinkles on a crumpled piece of paper. These memories are stored in disordered solids in which the arrangement of particles seems random but actually contains details about past deformations. Materials should not be able to form return-point memory when the force only occurs in one direction. For example, a bridge might sag slightly as cars drive over it, but it doesn't curve upwards once the cars are gone.

The researchers boiled down the components of the system—such as the particles in a solid or the microscopic domains in a magnet—into abstract elements called hysterons. "Hysterons are elements of a system that may not immediately respond to external conditions, and can stay in a past state."

The hysterons in the model interact either in a cooperative way, where a change in one encourages a change in the other, or in a non-cooperative "frustrated" way, where a change in one discourages a change in the other. Frustrated hysterons are the key to forming and recovering a sequence in a system with asymmetric driving.

"We think this is a way to design artificial systems with this special kind of memory, starting with the simplest mechanical systems not much more complicated than a bendy straw, and hopefully working up to something like an asymmetrical combination lock."

via Penn State: Chloe Lindeman et al, Generalizing multiple memories from a single drive: The hysteron latch, Science Advances (2025). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adr5933


Soap's maze-solving skills could unlock secrets of the human body
Jan 2025, phys.org

"Surfactants—the molecules found in soap—can naturally find its way through a maze"

We're talking about things acting like people. Imagine discovering that chairs can figure out how to best position themselves in a theater. Or the straps on your backpack can figure out the best length for positioning the pack on your back depending on the weight and the way you walk etc. Your pencil can figure out how to write a better sentence for convincing your roommate to do the dishes. I'm just trying to imagine what this all means.  

"When we put soap into a liquid filled maze, the natural surfactants already present in the liquid interact, creating an omniscient view of the maze, so the soap can intuitively find the correct path, ignoring all other irrelevant paths. This behavior occurs due to very subtle but powerful physics where the two types of surfactants generate tension forces that guide the soap to the exit."

Yes, they called soap bubbles omniscient. 

via Department of Mathematics at the University of Manchester: Richard Mcnair et al, Exogenous–Endogenous Surfactant Interaction Yields Heterogeneous Spreading in Complex Branching Networks, Physical Review Letters (2025). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.134.034001