This project is all about the sound of science. Using a balloon and some carbon dioxide, teens can create their own sound-amplifying apparatuses (as if the music they listen to weren’t loud enough).
Bursting balloons is good fun, but there is also some fascinating physics lurking in how the fabric of the balloon is ripped apart. Two physicists in France have studied the bursting process using a ...
The ultimate goal to making virtual reality feel more like reality is letting users physically touch non-existent objects in a VR world. Until we figure out the technology behind Star Trek’s Holodecks ...
WEBVTT ON EARTH ALMOST 20 MILES HIGH.>> IT IS ONE OF THOSE MOMENTSWHEN YOU SAY, I CANNOT BELIEVETHIS IS MY JOB.JUSTIN: DANNY BOWMAN IS AGEOPHYSICIST AT SANDIA NATIONALLABORATORIES AND HAS ...
THE rips that tear through a rubber balloon when it is popped travel faster than the speed of sound in rubber, creating waves similar to the sonic boom made by an aircraft when it breaks the sound ...
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