Released into the #PublicDomain and uploaded to #WikimediaCommons, together with the #Mathematica script used to generate it: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Wavefront_Shaping_Focussing.gif

Released into the #PublicDomain and uploaded to #WikimediaCommons, together with the #Mathematica script used to generate it: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Wavefront_Shaping_Focussing.gif
Released into the #PublicDomain and uploaded it on #WikimediaCommons, together with the #Mathematica code used to generate it: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Shack-Hartmann.gif
For the people at Wikimedia Commons: I used to be User:Berto, but I lost my password, so I now I am User:Clodovendro. I make a number of scientific visualizations using #Mathematica, and I release them into the #PublicDomain (and upload the on Commons so everyone can use them).
My #introduction in #English seems to have been lost in moving instances, so here's a fast-drawn new one in hashtags:
#science #physics
since 2021 working on
#fiberlinks #frequency #time #transfer #reference #quantum #metrology
before that on
#biophysics #raman #spectroscopy #microscopy #biofilm #bacteria #protein #microplastics
#programming
#python (#fortran #mathematica )
Other interests:
#plants #cats #sciencefiction #fantasy #reading #writing #audiobooks
IMHO One of the prime reasons that most code found in academic (and perhaps corporate?) settings suck is because we don't teach people to use functional programming constructs. I have observed this in #perl, #rstats, #Mathematica & even #C (assuming you take care with pointers).
Released into the #PublicDomain and uploaded to #WikimediaCommons together with the #Mathematica script used to generate it: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Crystal_Structure_as_Lattice_and_Basis.gif
Released into the #PublicDomain and uploaded to #WikimediaCommons together with the #Mathematica script used to generate it: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Wigner-Seitz_Cell.gif
Released into the #PublicDomain and uploaded to #WikimediaCommons, together with the #Mathematica script used to generate it: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Bravais_Lattices.gif
Released into the #PublicDomain and uploaded to #WikimediaCommons together with the #Mathematica script used to generate it: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Fermi_Gas.gif
Released into the #PublicDomain and uploaded to #WikimediaCommons together with the #Mathematica script used to generate it: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Drude_Model.gif
Please, please can someone talk to Stephen Wolfram and get him to agree to let them put the last copy of #Mathematica that ran on #NeXTSTEP in the image.
One of my favorite questions was whether a #Mathematica license still comes with the #RaspberryPi in #RaspberryPi5 .
According to it's publisher, Wolfram Research, yes it does--for non-commercial use.
"Michael Mann on Taking Action to Address the Climate Crisis" | My interview about #OurFragileMoment with #Mathematica: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cpp64ab69fs
Food ontology jumanji has been reached, please inform Supper Club. @Cameo
So... 'A New Kind of Science" has a much longer history of inspiration than I would have guessed. Coolio!
While I agree that ChatGPT *could* be good at facts. That is just not the domain of LLM's currently.
These examples are hilarious and point out the problems very starkly depending on these systems for any kind of accuracy.
I enjoy painting color wheels, and I’m delighted to have finished my first one inspired by something I saw here on Mastodon, a recent post by @arnoudbuzing showing a #mathematica plot for the function
\[ \frac{z^2+1}{z^2-1} \]
This #complex function has two zeros at i and -i, shown in black, and two poles (singularities) at 1 and -1, shown in white. The origin is in the center.
This original painting is available in my Etsy shop, gwenbeads.
#mathart #colorwheel #watercolor #singularity
OMG! We got AstroPosition[ and AstroGraphics functions in #Mathematica