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May 14, 2010 By Sarah Webb

Learning by doing: revisiting Epiphanies

Webb of Science needs a breather, so I’ve decided to repost my inaugural post from the 2009 blogathon about problem-solving in both science and writing. I still love what I do, the puzzle of pulling words together. Last year and this year, blogging each day in May reminds me of old lessons and teaches me…

Permalink career science chemistry epiphany May blogathon problem solving
March 24, 2010 By Sarah Webb 2 Comments

Ada Lovelace Day– science teachers and Mrs. Findley

I’m participating in Ada Lovelace Day, saluting women in technology and science. I thought about writing about a particular researcher, but I decided instead to single out the often anonymous heroines (and heroes) of science and technology, the teachers who inspire young minds to pursue science careers. Though their names aren’t remembered by Nobel or…

Permalink career how it's served up writing Ada Lovelace Day chemistry Mrs. Findley science teacher
October 7, 2009 By Sarah Webb

Chemistry Nobel, women, and the "choice"

On Monday, I mentioned that it was a good week for women in science. Well, it got even better today with the announcement of the chemistry prize.  Ada Yonath of the Weizmann Institute of Science becomes the fourth woman to be awarded a Nobel Prize in Chemistry (sharing the prize with Venkatraman Ramakrishnan of the…

Permalink career nucleic acid science Ada Yonath chemistry Nobel Prize ribosome women in science
September 17, 2009 By Sarah Webb 4 Comments

They Might Be Giants and Schoolhouse Rock

How did I get so lucky? Seriously. A little while ago, I came across this post in Nature News’s blog about the new kids’ album from They Might Be Giants. And. The. Videos. My neighbors probably heard me scream with glee, and then I made an impulse buy on iTunes–which I rarely do. Honest. Wow,…

Permalink just plain fun science Brian Lehrer Show chemistry elements Schoolhouse Rock They Might Be Giants
September 12, 2009 By Sarah Webb 4 Comments

Loose ends or a visitor in her former country

“So do you consider yourself a scientist or a writer?” An undergraduate student asked me that question last fall when I guest-lectured about communicating research for a social-scientist friend’s seminar course. I immediately said, “A writer, but I write about science.” But I do understand why he was confused. Even having done it, I wouldn’t…

Permalink career science chemical biology chemistry PIP2 research writing
September 1, 2009 By Sarah Webb

Revisiting DNA origami

Creating a genetic program to crinkle DNA into the perfect shape can appear to be a scientific stunt. But DNA origami is more than a molecular magic trick. In this excerpt from a 2007 TED lecture, Paul Rothemund describes the science behind the work– how a chain– based on its sequence– becomes a two-dimensional shape.…

Permalink nucleic acid science technology chemistry DNA origami Paul Rothemund transistor
August 26, 2009 By Sarah Webb 2 Comments

Melodies divert droplets

So, today I’m revealing some the depths of my true chemistry geekiness. As I was poring over press releases, I found one from the University of Michigan that was fun– but probably also too geeky– to propose as a story idea: a microfluidic device that moves droplets based on sound waves. First of all, some…

Permalink science technology chemistry dance microfluidics music sound University of Michigan
August 21, 2009 By Sarah Webb

Pop goes the antioxidants

Summer’s distracted me from blogging, but I just returned from the American Chemical Society meeting in Washington, DC. That meeting is a huge mishmash for me– a combination of catching up with former chemistry colleagues, meeting up with current writing colleagues, and getting myself back up to speed on what’s new with molecules. Though it’s…

Permalink food health science American Chemical Society antioxidants butter chemistry microwave popcorn whole grains
June 28, 2009 By Sarah Webb 2 Comments

Molecule of the Week: Carbon dioxide (part 1 of many)

This small molecule is too big for a single post, so I’ll probably revisit it at different points in this blog. It’s the most oxidized form of carbon, often thought of as waste product: both of fossil fuel burning and of the energy reactions that fuel life. But it’s also an essential component of photosynthesis…

Permalink environment Molecule of the Week policy science ACES carbon dioxide chemistry fish ocean acidification otolith
June 14, 2009 By Sarah Webb 1 Comment

Molecule of the Week: Hydrogen

Though hydrogen is the smallest atom and is perched at the top left of the periodic table, hydrogen in nature exists as two atoms hooked together. Hydrogen hit the news this weekend as a leak led NASA to scrub the Space Shuttle Endeavor launch: Hydrogen is as clean as chemical fuels get: burning it produces…

Permalink Molecule of the Week science Space exploration chemistry Endeavor energy fuel gasoline helium hydrogen leak NASA periodic table Space Shuttle star
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