Sunday, June 7, 2026

Climate Called, Wants Volcanoes Back

 

"More rapidly than we thought" is the theme  here.

But let's start with IMO 2020 - the biggest climate story of the 21st century that you will not hear about because it's too complicated:

When trade routes shift, so do clouds: Researchers uncover ripple effects of new global shipping regulations
Nov 2025, phys.org

In January 2020, the International Maritime Organization mandated a major reduction in sulfur content in marine fuels to decrease air pollution. But this decreased cloud formation, the same clouds that have historically masked about one-third of the warming caused by greenhouse gases.

Militia attacks in November 2023 rerouted cargo ships in the Red Sea's Bab al-Mandab Strait to the Cape of Good Hope, and gave researchers the opportunity to discover that the new fuel regulations that cut sulfur by about 80% also lowered cloud droplet formation by about 67%. (Quantifying how clouds respond to changes in aerosols remains one of the biggest challenges in studying the climate.)

Although these aerosols temporarily cool the planet, this comes at the cost of human health. Exposure to sulfur particles, potent air pollutants, is linked to respiratory and cardiovascular diseases. The IMO regulation is estimated to have already prevented tens of thousands of premature deaths.

via Florida State University Department of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Science: Michael S. Diamond et al, Conflict-induced ship traffic disruptions constrain cloud sensitivity to stricter marine pollution regulations, Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (2025). DOI: 10.5194/acp-25-16401-2025

Image credit: Space tornado - coronal mass ejection plasma stream - Chip Manchester for University of Michigan - 2025 [link]

Key 'fingerprint' reveals slowdown of Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation
Nov 2025, phys.org

  • They uncovered a key "fingerprint" of AMOC slowdown: mid-depth (1,000–2,000 meters) warming in the equatorial Atlantic Ocean.
  • Using the Massachusetts Institute of Technology General Circulation Model (MITgcm)
  • AMOC slowdown triggers subsurface warming in the subpolar North Atlantic, which then generates baroclinic Kelvin waves traveling equatorward along the western boundary of the North Atlantic; upon reaching the equator, these waves propagate along the equatorial region, ultimately causing the distinct mid-depth warming.

via Chinese Academy of Sciences Institute of Oceanology, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and UC San Diego: Qiuping Ren et al, Equatorial Atlantic mid-depth warming indicates Atlantic meridional overturning circulation slowdown, Communications Earth & Environment (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s43247-025-02793-1


Ocean's upper 1,000 meters undergoing unprecedented, deep-reaching compound change
Nov 2025, phys.org

"The ocean is experiencing strong compound change multidimensionally. The ocean condition is transforming in multiple dimensions at once, and even the deep ocean - once considered stable - is responding more rapidly than we thought."

via Chinese Academy of Sciences Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Mercator Ocean International, and the Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique at the École Normale Supérieure in France: Observed large-scale and deep-reaching compound ocean state changes over the past 60 years, Nature Climate Change (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41558-025-02484-x.
 

Global warming amplifies extreme day-to-day temperature swings
Dec 2025, phys.org

"Climate roller coaster" (aka weather whiplash)

The study defines such extreme temperature events as occurrences where the temperature difference between two consecutive days exceeds the 90th percentile of historical records. These extreme day-to-day temperature changes have become more frequent and intense across low- to mid-latitude regions. Soil drought leads to reduce the surface's heat capacity and amplify fluctuations in cloud cover and radiation. 

The health risks posed by these sudden temperature shifts outweigh other temperature-related variables. The correlation between these extreme temperature events and all-cause mortality follows a near-exponential pattern. (exponential)

via Nanjing University and the Institute of Atmospheric Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences: Qi Liu et al, Global warming intensifies extreme day-to-day temperature changes in mid–low latitudes, Nature Climate Change (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41558-025-02486-9

*They don't mention acclimation but that's why it's so dangerous. A 100F day is hot, but an 80F day after a 50F day is equally hot, relative to the body that's trying to cool itself. People need something like one day per degree to acclimate, and weather whiplash does not allow that.

“Acclimatization” means temporary adaptation of the body to work in the heat that occurs gradually when a person is exposed to it. Acclimatization peaks in most people within four to fourteen days of regular work for at least two hours per day in the heat. 
--Source: California Department of Industrial Relations, Heat Illness Prevention in Indoor Places of Employment, Mar 2023. https://www.dir.ca.gov/OSHSB/Indoor-Heat.html

Mostly meaningless unlabeled line chart

Category '6' tropical cyclone hot spots are growing
Dec 2025, phys.org

Hurricane Patricia, which formed in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Mexico, was the strongest tropical cyclone ever recorded, with wind intensity of up to 185 knots - enough to make it considered a Category 7 storm, if such a thing existed. 
  • Cat 4 - 114 - 137 knots
  • Cat 5 - 137 (or more) knots
  • Cat 6 - 160 (or more) knots, proposed

via American Geophysical Union and Department of Atmospheric Science at the National Taiwan University: A31A-06 Category ‘6’ Tropical Cyclone Hot Spots in the Warming Climate


Excruciating tropical disease can now be transmitted in most of Europe, study finds
Feb 2026, The Guardian

Higher temperatures due to the climate crisis mean infections (chikungunya, dengue) are now possible for more than six months of the year in Spain, Greece and other southern European countries, and for two months a year in south-east England. 

“Twenty years ago, if you said we were going to have chikungunya and dengue in Europe, everybody would have said you were mad: these are tropical diseases. Now everything’s changed."

via UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology 


Widespread 'enhanced rock weathering' could slow global warming
Feb 2026 phys.org

Enhanced Rock Weathering - crush silicate rocks, add to crop soil, and let the rock dust naturally react with carbon dioxide. The reactions bind carbon into stable mineral forms that can persist for millennia, while also enriching the soil with nutrients, boosting crop yields and increasing farmer profits.

It could remove up to about a gigaton of carbon from the atmosphere annually by 2100, roughly equivalent to the yearly emissions of a major industrial economy. But to reach that mark, access and adoption by the Global South, where warmer and wetter conditions facilitate rock weathering, will be essential.

(Which is interesting to consider, because obviously the Global North will not stop burning fossils, and the Global North will not solve this problem. It's the Global South only who has the ability to fix the future.)

via Cornell: Ying Tu et al, Scaling up enhanced rock weathering for equitable climate change mitigation, Communications Sustainability (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s44458-026-00034-w


An unprecedented Antarctic heat wave hit in the dead of winter - what it signals for the decades ahead
Apr 2026, phys.org

In July and August 2024, temperatures in parts of East Antarctica rose by up to 28°C above average and stayed high for more than two weeks. It followed a heat wave in March 2022, when temperatures in some Antarctic areas soared by nearly 40°C above average — one of the largest temperature anomalies ever recorded anywhere on the planet.

via University of Sheffield: Haosu Tang et al, Unprecedented 2024 East Antarctic winter heatwave driven by polar vortex weakening and amplified by anthropogenic warming, npj Climate and Atmospheric Science (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41612-026-01392-x


‘Point of no return’: New Orleans relocation must start now due to sea level, study finds
May 2026, The Guardian

The process of relocating people from New Orleans should start immediately, as the city has reached a “point of no return” that will see it surrounded by the ocean within decades due to the climate crisis, a stark new study has concluded.

Ongoing sea-level rise and the rampant erosion of wetlands in southern Louisiana will swallow up the New Orleans area within a few generations, with the new paper estimating the city “may well be surrounded by the Gulf of Mexico before the end of this century”.


Saturday, June 6, 2026

Clash of the Titans Never Ends


YouTube TV Blackout Costing Disney $4.3M per Day in Lost Revenue
Nov 2025, Variety Magazine
(Disney is losing an estimated $4.3 million per day from the ongoing YouTube TV blackout of ESPN, ABC, and other networks amid a contract dispute over carriage fees.)

Billionaire US investor Ken Griffin accuses Trump White House of ‘enriching’ itself
Feb 2026, The Guardian

OpenAI lawsuit updates: Elon Musk v. Sam Altman trial
Apr 2026, CNBC News

Mostly unrelated image above: Jane Rosenberg is a courtroom sketch artist. She seems to work exclusively at a federal courthouse in New York. She's been doing this for a very long time, and her work is (to me at least) immediately recognizable, and beyond what one should expect of a courtroom sketch artist, and it's often used as the thumbnail in media coverage for high profile cases such as the those from the articles mentioned above, or from, for example, the P Diddy case, from whence we get the new word "diddling", circa 2025. 

Friday, June 5, 2026

Make Stuff Up

 

A clearer future: Researchers unveil transparent, plastic-free wood
Feb 2026, phys.org

There was a lot of work coming out related to wood, like black wood, clear wood, wood stronger than steel, and I'm not sure what happened to all that. 

Wood is normally opaque because it contains lignin and countless microscopic air cavities called lumens, which scatter light. Removing lignin turns wood white and translucent but achieving true transparency has been challenging.

The research team focused on delignified wood treated with potassium hydroxide (KOH). They discovered that alkali treatment removes most of the remaining hemicellulose and changes the chemical state of carboxyl groups in the cell walls. These changes soften the wood's internal cellulose microfibril skeleton. When the treated wood is dried, the softened cell walls collapse more completely, reducing internal air gaps and dramatically decreasing light scattering. As a result, the material becomes highly transparent—without polymer impregnation or plastic additives.

via University of Osaka: Hitomi Yagyu et al, Anisotropic Transparency of Alkali‐Treated Wood, Macromolecular Materials and Engineering (2026). DOI: 10.1002/mame.202500389



AI-designed diffractive optical processors pave the way for low-power structural health monitoring
Mar 2026, phys.org

Probably read carefully, this is complicated.

Structural Health Monitoring - Instead of relying on traditional sensor networks that digitize raw physical signals, the new system uses a passive, optimized diffractive layer attached to the target structure. As the structure oscillates, this optimized diffractive surface moves, modulating an incoming illuminating wave to encode the structural displacements into light, which is then captured by a few optical detectors and rapidly decoded by a low-power neural network.

via UCLA Engineering Institute for Technology Advancement: Yuntian Wang et al, Structural vibration monitoring with diffractive optical processors, Science Advances (2026). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aea1712


What Chinese characters can tell us about designing strong materials
Apr 2026, phys.org

So what about graffiti?

"Certain Chinese characters have strong, distinctive geometries, and these are shapes that 'felt' like they could exhibit unique mechanical properties and behaviors." 

The presence of curves, crossbeams, and gradation, and the fact that they fit into discrete square cells makes Chinese characters especially fit for creating functional, structural unit cells.

via American Institute of Physics and University of Edinburgh: Mechanical metamaterials built from Chinese characters, The Journal of Applied Physics (2026). DOI: 10.1063/5.0304459


Texas startup uses robots to build homes out of clay and soil
May 2026, KXAN Austin

Startup Terran Robotics - they're literally grabbing dirt from the ground at the site and using it to build the house, using robots to do "rammed earth" construction, which is, interestingly, also the building style most often used in the self-sustainable Earthships of the American Southwest. 


How cement 'breathes in' and stores millions of tons of CO₂ a year
Dec 2025, phys.org

The cement in U.S. buildings and infrastructure sequesters over 6.5 million metric tons of CO2 annually. This corresponds to roughly 13% of the process emissions in U.S. cement manufacturing. In Mexico, the same building stock sequesters about 5 million tons a year.

A concrete highway in Dallas sequesters CO2 differently than Mexico City apartments made from concrete masonry units (CMUs). A foundation slab buried under the snow in Fairbanks, Alaska, "breathes in" CO2 at a different pace entirely.

"Carbon uptake is very sensitive to context. Four major factors drive it: the type of cement used, the product we make with it (concrete, CMUs, or mortar), the geometry of the structure, and the climate and conditions it's exposed to. Even within the same structure, uptake can vary five-fold between different elements."

"We observed something unique about Mexico: Despite using half the cement that the U.S. does, the country has three-quarters of the uptake. This is because Mexico makes more use of mortar and lower-strength concrete, and bagged cement mixed on-site. These practices are why their uptake sequesters about a quarter of their cement manufacturing emissions."

"Increasing the amount of surface area exposed to air accelerates uptake and can be achieved by foregoing painting or tiling, or choosing designs like waffle slabs with a higher surface area-to-volume ratio. Additionally, avoiding unnecessarily stronger, less-porous concrete mixtures than required would speed up uptake while using less cement."

via MIT Concrete Sustainability Hub: Hessam AzariJafari et al, Carbon uptake dynamics of cement-based materials: Linking market structure, material use, and the carbon cycle, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2515116122

Thursday, June 4, 2026

Brain Free Mind Control Turned Me Into Two Different People


Every day that neural probe gets a little smaller, and a little deeper. In fact, we're not even using probes anymore, we're just shooting you through the head with lasers. Blood-brain barrier? 20th century. Actually, we're not even using brains anymore, because brains are insecure, too much attack surface. 

Holographic optogenetics could enable faster brain mapping for new discoveries
Oct 2025, phys.org

Optogenetics is cool but have you tried holographic optogenetics?
 
via Columbia University, UC Berkeley, and the Vision Institute Wavefront Engineering Microscopy team of Sorbonne University: Marcus A. Triplett et al, Rapid learning of neural circuitry from holographic ensemble stimulation enabled by model-based compressed sensing, Nature Neuroscience (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41593-025-02053-7.

Also: I-Wen Chen et al, High-throughput synaptic connectivity mapping using in vivo two-photon holographic optogenetics and compressive sensing, Nature Neuroscience (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41593-025-02024-y.



Neural implant smaller than a grain of salt can wirelessly track brain
Nov 2025, phys.org

MOTE - microscale optoelectronic tetherless electrode, a small scale, neural monitor and bio-integrated sensor, powered by red and infrared laser beams that pass harmlessly through brain tissue, and using a semiconductor diode made of aluminum gallium arsenide 

via Cornell Nanyang Technological University: Sunwoo Lee et al, A subnanolitre tetherless optoelectronic microsystem for chronic neural recording in awake mice, Nature Electronics (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41928-025-01484-1


'Brain-free' robots that move in sync are powered entirely by air
Nov 2025, phys.org

Brain-free is another way to say it. They also call them "fluidic robots", and also embodied intelligence. 

A major goal in soft robotics is to encode behavior and decision-making directly into the robot's physical structure. 

They devised a single module that can do all three of these things: actuate in response to air pressure like a muscle, sense pressure change, and switch air flow between on and off like a logic gate. 

"This spontaneous coordination requires no predetermined instructions but arises purely from the way the units are coupled to each other and upon their interaction with the environment."

"Encoding decision-making and behavior directly into the robot's physical structure could lead to adaptive, responsive machines that don't need software to 'think.' It is a shift from 'robots with brains' to 'robots that are their own brains.' That makes them faster, more efficient, and potentially better at interacting with unpredictable environments."

via University of Oxford RADLab: Multifunctional Fluidic Units for Emergent, Responsive Robotic Behaviors, Advanced Materials (2025). DOI: 10.1002/adma.202510298.


Bioluminescent tool captures neural activity without external lasers
Dec 2025, phys.org

The team described a bioluminescence tool it recently developed, called the Ca2+ BioLuminescence Activity Monitor - or "CaBLAM," for short.

"You can make that process calcium-sensitive so you can get proteins that will shift back a different amount or different color of light, depending on whether or not calcium is present, with a bright signal."

via Bioluminescence Hub at Brown University Carney Institute for Brain Science: Gerard G. Lambert et al, CaBLAM: a high-contrast bioluminescent Ca2+ indicator derived from an engineered Oplophorus gracilirostris luciferase, Nature Methods (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41592-025-02972-0


Brain computer interface enables rapid communication for two people with paralysis
Mar 2026, phys.org

This was always the way it was going to happen - they aren't choosing one letter at a time with an eye-tracker, they're imagining typing with their fingers, and the corresponding motor cortex spits signals recorded by the brain implant: 

"BrainGate" - Microelectrode sensors are placed in the motor cortex, a part of the brain that controls movement. Next, a QWERTY keyboard is displayed in front of the participant, with each letter mapped onto fingers and finger positions—up, down, or curled. As the participant intuitively attempts these finger movements, the electrodes sense the brain's electrical activity, then send a signal to a computer system that can translate the neural activity into letters. This output is then processed through a final predictive language model to ensure a cohesive, accurate communication result.

via Mass General Brigham Neuroscience Institute and Brown University: Justin J. Jude, Restoring rapid natural bimanual typing with a neuroprosthesis after paralysis, Nature Neuroscience (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41593-026-02218-y. 


Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Temu Promethius



I rarely if ever use the illustrations in the thumbnail for the article. But first of all, the use of generative ai for illustrating science discoveries and inventions has been a big game changer. Second of all this idea needs an image, and this image seems to be perfectly explaining what's going on. It's a neuromorphic substrate for a neuromorphic computer that grows all by itself, in other words, "Artist's rendering of a biocomputing device that combines biological neurons with advanced electronics into a network that can be programmed to recognize patterns" --Kate Zvorykina w Ella Maru Studio, Inc for Princeton, 2026

Source:
New 3D device harnesses living brain cells for computing
Apr 2026, phys.org 

But here's the real reason for this post. 

AI Art - Shitty image generated by the editorial team using AI for illustrative purposes - 2026

Watching this seismic shift in visualization is a crazy experience - these kinds of images, the thumbnail here, are exactly the kind of thing I pushed my art students to go past - it's always a person or a person's head, and cramming other more abstract objects etc into it or near it. It's the most basic form of symbolic imagery creation, and it's fucking boring guys. It doesn't matter if it's done with good technical accuracy, it's still boring. Will we all learn to grow past this tendency together or will there be a divide between people who can think more outside the box vs everyone else (sounds like the role the artist has had forever, no different just because ai is so "revolutionary").

Note that my google email inbox services ask me if I want to use their artificial intelligence email summary feature to summarize this email, but only this email, the one containing this article that I sent to myself, despite my having hundreds of similar ones in the same inbox. But I digress; because I don't care about the article, just the picture.

Source:
Can AI ascertain our personality traits from our ChatGPT history?
May 2026, phys.org


Tuesday, June 2, 2026

New Jersey Graffiti in the Wild

EVICT and 2BROKE in the background - Apr 2026

Over 100 firefighters battle fire that erupted at N.J. chemical warehouse, authorities say
Apr 2026, nj.com

More than 100 firefighters battled a blaze Thursday afternoon that erupted at a Newark chemical warehouse, authorities said.

Crews were called to the warehouse, located at 104 Lister Ave., at 12:53 p.m. and within the hour, the fire was upgraded from a two-alarm to a three-alarm blaze, Newark Public Safety Director Emanuel Miranda said.

Monday, June 1, 2026

The Most Representative Image of Lab Blood on the Internet


Can we just pay some respects to this image - it's been around for years and shows up at least once a week, carrying most of the weight of the internet when it comes to anything related to blood and science and even just human health in general. Respect!

For example, in the wild:
PFAS exposure may limit improvements in blood sugar after bariatric surgery
Dec 2025, phys.org