Susanna Heikkilä solved a problem in topology, or mathematics pertaining to the shape of surfaces. The fact that one of the ...
Researchers manipulated water waves to move ping pong balls with a level of precision that seems straight out of a sci-fi movie.
The Triton Museum in Santa Clara, which has showcased local artists for many years, is exhibiting 20 years’ worth of work by ...
Locomotion, the ability to move from one place to another, is an essential survival strategy for virtually every organism. Adapting to the unpredictable terrain they run into, cells, fungi and ...
Inspired by how brainless lifeforms such as starfish and slime moulds move around, physicists have constructed 'odd' objects ...
Advance in robot locomotion by UChicago, University of Amsterdam researchers could offer new avenues for design ...
Where there's water, there are waves. But what if you could bend water waves to your will to move floating objects? Scientists have now developed a technique to merge waves in a water tank to produce ...
Inspired by how brainless lifeforms such as starfish and slime moulds move around, physicists at the University of Amsterdam ...
On top of the table is a stack of black, brown, blue, and white geometric shapes—objects the artist identified as a pipe, a package of tobacco, and a pouch. Let’s turn now to the figure in the middle.
Once you understand how certain clouds develop their shapes, you can learn to forecast the weather. Clouds that look like cartoon cotton balls or cauliflower ... ice onto objects at or near ...
How are clouds’ shapes made? – Amanda ... Clouds that look like cartoon cotton balls or cauliflower are made up of tiny liquid water droplets and are called cumulus clouds.