♥ tildemo here.
Weird art, street art and geeky jokes, compiled to create some semblance of a personality.
Sometimes, I actually make things.
Quantum Levitation Demonstration at North Museum

literally what happens
im still fucking laughing at this
Reblogged from potatocrisp with 31,306 notes | Source: commanderjshepard
These awesome 8-bit shoe clips can be found at Janine Basil’s etsy shop!

SCIENCE!
science has figured out how to open a portal to hell
It’s Cthulhu!!!!!!!!
- sand
- alcohol or lighter fluid
- sugar
- Mix 4 parts powdered sugar with 1 part baking soda.
- Make a mound with the sand. Push a depression into the middle of the sand.
- Pour the alcohol or other fuel into the sand to wet it.
- Pour the sugar and baking soda mixture into the depression.
- Ignite the mound, using a lighter or match.
Oh tumblr, what would we do without you.
REBLOGGING AGAIN FOR THE EXPLANATION
Reblogged from tennyboo with 300,054 notes | Source: laissesaigner
Strange Attractors by Chaotic Atmospheres
The darkest art known as Chaos Theory is perfectly embodied in the form of its strange attractors: vast looping trajectories of variables that, when plotted, conjure gorgeous yet insidiously disruptive patterns. Chaotic Atmosphere’s Math: Rules series pays tribute to the beautiful form of chaos and its inevitable collapse of all our efforts to predict it.
Artist: Behance / DeviantArt / Twitter
Watch the full video: Blossoming into Science with actress Mayim Bialik
A fantastic video for girls interested in STEM (4:14 runtime)
Specular holograms by Matthew Brand currently on display at the new Museum of Mathematics in New York.
See his site for more.
The technique used by Brand to create these pieces is not one of conventional holography. He meticulously controls the unique shape of thousands of tiny optical pieces placed on a surface creating a 3D effect when the light source or viewer moves. This is essentially a mathematical problem in differential geometry and combinatorial optimization. Brand was the first person to correctly describe this technique in 2008 even though it dates back as early as the 1930s (check out his paper for details).
Reblogged from vindictiverot with 2,724 notes | Souce: nldmut
Windows 98 Screensavers
Minimalist Posters That Cleverly Showcase Famous Scientists’ Greatest Achievements
Artist: Kapil Bhagat