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In his Art meets science concept, Michael Buckler (Germany) creates intersections between these two disciplines, using thin sections of meteorite as 'metaphoric materials'.
The artist created a nanosculpture (sculpture at the molecular and atomic levels) by freezing a tiny drop of colloidal graphite (graphite nanoparticles in a suspension) in liquid nitrogen at -196 degrees Celsius.
Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) inventor, engineer, architect, mathematician, geologist, and astronomer, he is most famous for his works of art like the Mona Lisa and the Last Supper. Though best known as a painter, Leonardo primarily worked for the military, producing designs of airplanes, tanks and submarines, long before such war-machines were created. He is also famous for his sketches of the muscles & bones in the human body and also discovered how sedimentary rocks and fossils form.
Magnetic fields can be hard to understand or characterize. Two natural means of visualization are the aurora and the Sun's corona. In the laboratory, Michael Snyder and Jonathan Frederick of Murray State University in Murray, Kentucky, have explored a novel way to visualize fields. They start with a Hele-Shaw cell, comprising two parallel glass plates with the narrow gap between them filled with a ferrofluid--a colloidal dispersion of 10nm ferromagnetic particles.
Welcome to the first SciScoop Art Meets Science posting. You can submit your science-inspired art or images from art-inspired science right here, right now. In this first edition, artist Randall Kopping, who suggested the idea of an art meets science section for the site, shows us his cosmic view of the birth of a galaxy. If you'd like to post your own artwork on SciScoop please follow the instructions here