OMG science
fromNature
4 days agoDaily briefing: Are boys really in crisis? What the science says
Concerns about boys should be viewed in the broader context of all young people.
Squeaking occurs across various contexts including shoes, bike brakes, rubber tires, and biomedical implants when soft and hard surfaces contact each other. Researchers used high-speed photography to study a rubber block sliding across hard acrylic to identify the source of these sounds. The investigation revealed that pulses similar to earthquake dynamics drive the squeaking phenomenon.
We were not expecting to find so much richness and depth from a physics point of view underneath the sole of a shoe, says Adel Djellouli, a scientist at Harvard University and co-lead of the study. In a new study, scientists explore the physics that give rise to the familiar squeak of basketball shoes sliding on a hard surface.
Apple's shift to 3D-printed titanium marks a turning point, not just for wearables, but for how material innovation becomes the foundation for meaningful design change. Every Apple Watch Ultra 3 and titanium Series 11 case now emerges from additive manufacturing using 100 percent recycled aerospace-grade titanium powder. The process cuts raw material consumption in half and saves over 400 metric tons this year alone.
Sure, concrete guitars do exist in the novelty space (they aren't a new idea), but they're typically solid slabs that weigh somewhere between 80 and 90 pounds, which makes them less "playable instrument" and more "sculptural middle finger to ergonomics." What these two pulled off is different. They engineered a semi-hollow body with 3/8 inch concrete walls, kept the whole thing under 20 pounds (19.8 to be exact), and somehow nailed the intonation without any adjustments.
Part 2 of the TED Radio Hour episode "The skin we're in" Anna Maria Coclite is developing artificial skin, even more sensitive than our own. For burn victims and beyond, this "smart skin" has the potential to restore sensation to our body's largest organ. About Anna Maria Coclite Anna Maria Coclite is a professor in the Department of Physics, University of Bari Aldo Moro, in Italy.
Stainless steel 1.4542, known for its exceptional strength and moderate corrosion resistance, stands out due to its capability of being heat-treated for varying strength levels without significant distortion.