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Items tagged with: sciart


Happy birthday to #mathematician & #polymath, Mary Fairfax Somerville (1780-1872). As a young widow she made a name for herself when she won a silver medal in 1811 from the Military College at Marlow math journal. Wallace suggested she read Laplace & finding she understood it as well as her tutor her confidence increased, & she expanded her studies to #astronomy, chemistry, #geography, microscopy, electricity & magnetism.

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#printmaking #womeninstemm #linocut #sciart


A 2023 #scientist #linocut for #ArtAdventCalendar of #astronomer Vera Rubin (neĂ© Cooper, ‘28-‘16) & her discovery that angular motion of galaxies deviates from predictions, 1st evidence for dark matter, now known as 5x as common as matter & the stuff which dictates dynamics of galaxies & evolution of our universe! The Nobel committee waited 3 years after she died to reward another for the theory of dark matter.

She found 6 months mat leave post MSc very difficult đŸ§”1/n

#printmaking #sciart


For #ArtAdventCalendar Day 3, a new scientist portrait: my #linocut of ancient Chinese Han Dynasty #polymath & statesman Zhang Heng (78-139) who invented a seismoscope (a simplified seismometer which doesn’t record earth motions) to detect distant earthquakes & indicate their direction, 2000 years ago! Here with a reconstruction of his seismoscope, schematic of how it might have worked & horizontal earthquake surface waves (Rayleigh waves in particular).

#histSci #printmaking #sciart đŸ§”1/n


Jewelry gifts for the nature and science lovers in your life. Earrings inspired by leaf venation, rings inspired by microscopic radiolaria and bryozoa https://n-e-r-v-o-u-s.com/shop/ #sciart


For the #Spacetober prompt heliophysics , of course it’s #astrophysicist Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin (1900-1979), who discovered what stars are made of & that hydrogen & helium are the most common elements in the universe.⁠
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Born England, she won a scholarship to Newnham College Cambridge in 1919 where she heard a lecture which changed her life. đŸ§”1/n
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#linocut #physics #sciart #printmaking #womenInSTEM #astrophysics #astronomer #MastoArt


For #Spacetober prompt historic figures, the one & only Mary Fairfax Somerville (1780-1872). As a young widow she made a name for herself when she won a silver medal in 1811 from the Military College at Marlow math journal. Wallace suggested she read Laplace & finding she understood it as well as her tutor her confidence increased, & she expanded her studies to #astronomy, chemistry, #geography, microscopy, electricity & magnetism. đŸ§”1/n

#printmaking #womeninstemm #linocut #sciart #MastoArt


The #SciArtSeptember prompt adornment made me think of fashion, “mauve madness” & William Henry Perkin (1838-1907)’s serendipitous discovery of the 1st synthetic organic dye: mauveine.

Perkin entered the Royal College of Chemistry in London in 1853 at 15, studying with August Wilhelm von Hofmann who hired him as his assistant in 1855 & had him working on a series of experiments to try & synthesize quinine, used to treat malaria.
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#MastoArt
#linocut #printmaking #sciArt #chemistry #histsci


I have been taking part in #MinCup23 over on Bluesky but I think I will cross-post here too! Maybe sway some more votes?

I vote for great art or geophysics applications.

Sure, topaz is used as a gem, but Goethite (named for Goethe), has been used as a pigment from as early as the Lascaux caves! So Round 1 Match 6 vote Goethite over Topaz.

Polymath Goethe, incidentally, thought his Theory of Colours (1810) his most important work, hence my Fauvism-inspired print #sciart #colour #art #science


Happy birthday to Antoine Lavoisier (26 August 1743 – 8 May 1794), a progenitor of the study of #chemistry, shown here with his wife Marie-Anne Paulze Lavoisier (1758 – 1836).⁠ #linocut #sciart #histstm #tarot⁠ #MastoArt
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The couple, working closely together, modernized & quantified chemistry & the scientific method, recognized and named oxygen & hydrogen, explained the role that oxygen plays in combustion, helped modernize chemical nomenclature & discovered that mass is conserved in đŸ§” 1/n


Happy birthday to trailblazing American computer scientist Frances Elizabeth Allen (1932 – 2020) who made foundational contributions to optimizing compilers, optimizing programs and parallel computing. She was the first woman to become an IBM Fellow, where she worked from 1957 to 2002 and as an emeritus fellow afterwards. She was the first woman to win the Turing Prize.

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#printmaking #womenInSTEM #histSTM #computing #MastoArt #mathematician #sciart #compsci

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