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Scents of Science

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myfusimotors

Why is a science blog named after a motor neuron? Fair question. If you landed here expecting car parts or motor repairs, I'm sorry...and also, stay. You might find something more interesting. Fusimotor neurons are a type of nerve cell in your body right now, quietly doing one of the most elegant jobs in neuroscience. They don't move your muscles directly. Instead, they adjust the sensitivity of your muscle spindles — the tiny stretch receptors embedded in your muscle fibers. In plain terms: they set the dial on how aware your nervous system is of its own body. They are the hidden calibrators of human movement, and almost nobody knows they exist. That's exactly why I named this blog after them. The best science isn't always the most famous science. Some of the most fascinating things happening inside the human body — inside your body — are invisible, unnamed, and completely overlooked. This blog exists to change that. I am a collection of water, calcium and organic molecules, but not a single one of the cells that compose me knows who I am, or cares...So why should you? Maybe because the story of what we are is more interesting than the story of who we are. That's what this blog is about. New posts go up every Tuesday and Friday. No newsletters, no algorithms — just good science writing, when you come looking for it. If you're curious about a topic, feel free to reach out. Some of my best posts have started with a reader's question. Welcome to myfusimotors. The hidden calibrators sent me. Corina.

Carina Cliffs from the Webb Space Telescope

Stars created these cliffs. Specifically, the destructive winds and energetic light from the stars in the open cluster NGC 3324 eroded away part of a mountain of dark interstellar dust in the northern part of the Carina Nebula. Several of these stars are visible toward the top of this highly detailed image taken... Continue Reading →

All the Light We Cannot See

I have been feeling very clearheaded lately and what I want to write about today is the sea. It contains so many colors. Silver at dawn, green at noon, dark blue in the evening. Sometimes it looks almost red. Or... Continue Reading →

Statue of Dante in Piazza Dante in Naples

Next ← Among LaurieAnnie's photos ACTIONS LaurieAnnie club Posted: July  2, 2016 Taken: June  6, 2013  0 favorites      0 comments     350 visits See also... Naples Keywords Italy •Europe •Naples •2013 •FujiFinePixS4500 •Dante •sculpture •statue •art Authorizations, license  Visible by: Everyone All rights reserved  350 visits Statue of Dante in Piazza Dante in Naples, June 2013 Piazza Dante is a... Continue Reading →

Mechanism Of Normal Heart (1930)

This English film shows diagrams of heart and sinus-node mechanism, excitation-wave pathway, interpretation of electrocardiograph. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sJvhgycFYfs

Sea and Sky Glows over the Oregon Coast

Every step caused the sand to light up blue. That glow was bioluminescence -- a blue radiance that also lights the surf in this surreal scene captured in mid-2018 at Meyer's Creek Beach in Oregon, USA. Volcanic stacks dot the foreground sea, while a thin fog layer scatters light on... Continue Reading →

Repeated concussions can thicken the skull, Monash University study finds

New research has found that repeated concussions can thicken the structure of skull bones. Previous studies have shown damage to the brain following concussion, but have not looked at the brain’s protective covering. A Monash-led study published in the journal Scientific... Continue Reading →

Second try for the Artemis I Moon flight

Teams are moving forward to the Moon with a second launch attempt of the Artemis I mission on Saturday, 3 September. The two-hour launch window starts at 20:17 CEST (19:17 BST). The original countdown stopped last Monday, 40 minutes before... Continue Reading →

Sun and Moon and ISS

On August 25 Sun and Moon could both be seen in planet Earth's daytime skies. And so could the International Space Station. The ISS crossed the disk of the waning crescent Moon as seen from Shunyi district, Beijing, China at about... Continue Reading →

Peering into mirror nuclei, physicists see unexpected pairings

The atomic nucleus is a busy place. Its constituent protons and neutrons occasionally collide, and briefly fly apart with high momentum before snapping back together like the two ends of a stretched rubber band. Using a new technique, physicists studying these... Continue Reading →

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