
The Scientific Lens
@LensScientific • 23,476 subscribers
Physics, Astronomy and beyond. A curated deep dive, from the subatomic to the supermassive.
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Despite being just one cell, Lacrymaria olor is a formidable predator that hunts and consumes other microorganisms. 📽: James Weiss
The Scientific Lens1,804,979 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

Turbulent air flow around the landing gear of a Boeing 777X [This took over 1 million processor hours to simulate]
The Scientific Lens1,135,369 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

Why do humans find symmetry so appealing? Is it biological, evolutionary, or a product of our collective consciousness?
The Scientific Lens1,230,728 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

A method of drawing infinitely many touching circles Credit: Matt Henderson
The Scientific Lens486,340 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

“Engineering is the closest thing to magic that exists in the world” — Elon Musk
The Scientific Lens201,126 просмотров • 1 месяц назад

This is Earth, seen from the rings of Saturn. Captured by NASA’s Cassini spacecraft, this image shows our planet from nearly 1.5 billion kilometers away. Earth appears as a faint point of light. Every city, every history, every civilization exists within that single speck. Earth is almost lost in comparison. The scale is unforgiving.
The Scientific Lens143,297 просмотров • 1 месяц назад

This is the anatomy of the Butterfly Effect The "fanning out" after a few bounces is an ensemble forecast. Tiny initial variations are amplified by the curved surface until near-identical deterministic paths spread into a hopeless cloud of possibilities
The Scientific Lens65,453 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

What’s your take on the simulation hypothesis? If you lean one way or the other, I’d like to hear your reasoning.
The Scientific Lens32,686 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

This is Mars. A full 360° panorama of the rugged beauty, full of ancient craters, scattered boulders, endless rusty dunes, and a hazy sky under a thin atmosphere, captured by NASA’s Perseverance rover. This is how it is, just raw reality from 140 million miles away.
The Scientific Lens14,564 просмотров • 29 дней назад

Why does a spinning object speed up as it shrinks? This Hoberman sphere demonstration illustrates the law of conservation of angular momentum. Moment of inertia measures how mass is distributed relative to the axis of rotation. When the sphere collapses, its mass moves inward. This decrease in inertia forces the angular velocity to increase because the total momentum of the system must remain constant. This same principle allows figure skaters to accelerate their spins and causes collapsing stars to become rapidly rotating pulsars. It is a fundamental rule of physics. Geometry determines speed. Video Credit: Physics Demos
The Scientific Lens16,700 просмотров • 1 месяц назад

“Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” — Arthur C. Clarke
The Scientific Lens12,245 просмотров • 1 месяц назад

Why do time slow down as you approach the speed of light? Because space and time are not separate things. They are woven together into spacetime, and the speed of light is built into its structure. Every object moves through spacetime at the same fundamental rate. When you are at rest, almost all of that motion is through time. As you move faster through space, some of that motion is redirected away from time. The total stays constant, so your clock must tick more slowly. This is not philosophy or metaphor. It has been measured with atomic clocks on airplanes and satellites. Move fast enough, and you do not just cross distances differently, you experience less time itself.
The Scientific Lens12,149 просмотров • 3 месяцев назад
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