Image of supernova remnant

Remnant of Kepler's Supernova (SN 1604) • NASA/ESA/JHU/R.Sankrit & W.Blair (Public Domain)

Image of flying saucer toy

Image by D J Shin (CC BY-SA 3.0)

Image of Holocaust Memorial

Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe—Berlin, Germany (Public Domain)

Image of the Sun in X-rays

High energy emissions from the Sun • NASA/JPL-Caltech/GSFC

Image of mathematical notes

Excerpt from a notebook of Ramanujan (Public Domain)

Image of man working at computer and music keyboard

Photo by Jesman fabio on Unsplash

But will it play in drawing room?

We have a teenag­er in our house with equal enthu­si­asm for com­put­ers and for clas­si­cal music. He brings the two togeth­er with inex­pen­sive soft­ware that allows him to tran­scribe a musi­cal score into his com­put­er, manip­u­late voice, key and tem­po, and play it back through the stereo sys­tem. The result leaves some­thing to be desired. When you have heard a Mozart piano con­cer­to syn­the­sized by a four-voice home com­put­er, it is easy to con­clude that com­put­ers and music should nev­er be allowed to mix.

Image of circle of light above Eiffel Tower

What could have been

A razzle-dazzle ring circling the world

From the moment the plan for a thou­sand-foot-high tow­er was approved, the naysay­ers began to carp. Forty-sev­en writ­ers, archi­tects, and artists penned an indig­nant man­i­festo con­demn­ing the “black and gigan­tic fac­to­ry chim­ney” that would crush beneath it all of the beau­ty of Paris. The writer Guy de Mau­pas­sant called it “an unavoid­able and tor­ment­ing nightmare.”

Image of primrose flowers

Primula vulgaris, or common primrose • Photo by Henry Perks on Unsplash

Image of 1927 Solvay conference

Marie Curie was lone woman at 1927 congress on physics in Brussels (Public Domain)

Image of the Hubble Space Telescope being deployed in space

The Hubble Space Telescope being deployed in 1990 • NASA/IMAX (Public Domain)

The tales told by starlight

One year ago this week [in Jan­u­ary 1986], the Space Shut­tle Chal­lenger explod­ed short­ly after take­off, tak­ing sev­en astro­nauts to a fiery death. Eval­u­a­tion of the acci­dent and redesign of the shut­tle and boost­er rock­ets has inter­rupt­ed the launch sched­ule for at least two years. For astronomers, the ground­ed shut­tle has meant a frus­trat­ing delay in deploy­ment of the Hub­ble Space Tele­scope, one of the most remark­able instru­ments in the his­to­ry of sci­ence, and one that has the poten­tial to rev­o­lu­tion­ize our knowl­edge of the universe.