“Why are they using SALIVA to clean works of art?” is a short video in the Química por aí series. It explores the Ig Nobel Prize winning research about using human saliva — spit — to preserve and repair valuable paintings, sculpture, and other art works: The 2018 Ig Nobel Chemistry Prize was awarded […]
The flexible power of statistics
Statistics can be used in intensely creative ways, especially in the business world. A CBC news report (on December 19, 2023) tells how this is visible in the automobile industry: New Kia vehicles that have arrived from overseas are sitting on a storage lot in Wolverton, Ont., purposely locked up even though customers have been […]
Assessment of the value in a professor’s testimony
In some cases, a professor’s legal testimony can be very valuable. A judge has now stated on the record how valuable: “a million dollars or so”. A December 18, 2023 Associated Press report, headlined “Judge criticizes Trump’s expert witness as he again refuses to toss fraud lawsuit“, says: Judge Arthur Engoron issued a written ruling […]
(Dangerous Bits of) Moon in the Sky
LIttle things complicate humans’ attempts to explore places other than the earth. Here’s a study about a small example: “The Damage to Lunar Orbiting Spacecraft Caused by the Ejecta of Lunar Landers,” Philip T. Metzger, James G. Mantovani, arXiv.2305.12234, 2023. The authors explain: “This manuscript analyzes lunar lander soil erosion models and trajectory models to […]
Scientific Dining Review: Eating at CERN
Mark Benecke, forensic entomologist and international theatrical star, sends this review of the dining facilities at CERN, the vast particle physics laboratory located on and under both sides of the Swiss-French border, partly in Geneva. [This continues a long AIR tradition of reviewing dining facilities at science research facilities.] Two of the restaurants (for U.S. […]
Holiday abdominal perimeters, Snakebitten on the toilet, CEO holiday recitations, Muddy White Christmas
This week’s Feedback column (that I write) in New Scientist magazine has four segments. Here are bits of each of them: Increasing perimeters — Some people are big on holidays – bigger than they were before those holidays. A team at the University of Castilla-La Mancha and the University of Valladolid, Spain, sized up some first-year undergraduate nursing students, […]
Ambiguous Title of the Week: Coffee and Failure
This week’s Ambiguous Paper Title is: “Coffee and heart failure: A further potential beneficial effect of coffee,” Anna Vittoria Mattioli and Alberto Farinetti, Nutrition, Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases, 2023.
Fake car transmission, Beer foam stink, Amusing the patient, Ducks versus monkeys
This week’s Feedback column (that I write) in New Scientist magazine has four segments. Here are bits of each of them: Gearing up for happiness — … The news headline says it all: “Toyota has built an EV with a fake transmission, and we’ve driven it – Five minutes behind the wheel, and you’ll be a believer.” This is […]
A visit to the lab of Ig Nobel Prize winner Yoshiaki Miyashita
Titled “Shingo Fujimori has a shocking taste experience! What is the laboratory of Professor Yoshiaki Miyashita, who won the Ig Nobel Prize?”, this video shows a visit to the lab at Meiji University. Yoshiaki Miyashita and Hiromi Nakamura were awarded the 2023 Ig Nobel Nutrition Prize, for experiments to determine how electrified chopsticks and drinking […]
Beneficial bird deaths? Clap for the man. No wait for weight. Disco astronomy.
This week’s Feedback column (that I write) in New Scientist magazine has four segments. Here are bits of each of them: Best interests at heart? — Feedback is fascinated by the final eight words in this statement: “Disadvantages include the competitive element associated with racing, which creates a strong incentive to kill birds where this is not in […]










