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The Nature of the Emporium

  • I (a science writer) wondered aloud if scientists had tattoos of their science. The answer was yes, and this site is the evidence. I'll be adding a new tattoo every day until I run out (if that day ever comes). If you want to share your own scientific ink, send it to me with some explanation.

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June 25, 2008

Galactic Bearings

Milky way Michael writes, "This is a tattoo of how our galaxy could look from a distance, with our solar system's position marked by the red star burst. A map, if you will, so that I do not get lost. I need only let my foot guide me home."

Carl: For the latest version of the Milky Way, see here.

May 09, 2008

Pillars of Creation

Pillars_of_creationRyan writes, "I am a big astronomy buff and this is a depiction of an eclipse with the Eagle Nebula and one of the angelic spires within it."

Carl: Check out this site at NASA for more pictures and some background about these staggering towers of light.

April 19, 2008

Word of the Day: Astrarium

AstrariumLauren writes, "I'm not a scientist by trade, but I am, in fact, a huge nerd. I study 18th-century British literature, including scientific literature. It was a wild time to be in science. It was also the heyday of the orrery, which provided the initial impetus for my tattoo. (Orreries, as it turned out, involve too many circles to make them feasible for inking on a large scale.) Then I discovered & fell in love with the comprehensive diagrams in Giovanni de'Dondi's 1364 Il Tractatus Astarii--the plans for the first famous astrarium. My backpiece is of the Mercury wheelwork. Of course, you couldn't track Mercury with it--de'Dondi followed Ptolemy--but I find his Astrarium a lovely & impressive testament to human ingenuity & curiosity."

Carl: It took sixteen years for de'Dondi's astrarium to be built, but it was later destroyed. See a reconstruction here. And read about de'Dondi here.

March 03, 2008

The Universe Is Pocked

Moon_with_galileo_ccw"Backstory: my parents met at a wedding on July 20, 1969, a very important date in the annals of human scientific achievement - the night humans first set foot on the moon. All my life, I have had a fascination with the moon not just as a tangible, graspable place (science fiction made real) but as a symbol for what the human race can achieve when we apply the best abilities of the best minds."

Carl: The moon was science's first glimpse of cosmic imperfection. For centuries, natural philosophers declared the heavens to be beyond decay and change. Everyone could see that the mooon was irregularly colored, but they explained it away in various ways--perhaps the reflection of the Earth itself, or the glint of sunlight bouncing off of celestial vapors. But when Galileo turned his telescope towards the moon, he saw clearly the moon's pock-like craters, changing with the shifting shadows. The moon is not timeless, but mature, its battered face the sign of experience; astronomy no longer has the purity of mathematics, but the fascinating quirks of biography.

February 17, 2008

Stargazer

Stargazer"Some history: My name is Skye, and I am a Chemist by trade, but in my spare time I am an stargazer and amateur astronomer."

Solar Location

Solar_location"This is an artist's rendition of Frake Drake's Solar Location Map on the Pioneer plaques. [CZ: Actually, I think it's Voyager] I'm an application engineer... A science fan that just wanted the aliens to know where to return me if I were to be abducted : )" --Matt

Arecibo

SetiA message for life elsewhere

Mars

Elbow_mars"My Mars tattoo, inspired by a close friend and the need for humans to go in to space. Well at least that's the short answer." --Walter Fruge

Flickr source

We Come In Peace

PioneerNiles writes, "My tattoo is the Pioneer Plaque."

Note from Carl: Here is some background on the Pioneer space missions.

Galileo

GallileoPax writes, "My Galileo tattoo. I'm in computers, but it's a general sentiment.. I think it fits the thread."

[Note from Carl: See here for more on this quotation.]

Black Hole Physics

SchwarzchildBart writes, ""I'm just happy that the artist now understands what a Swartzchild Radius is."

Solar System

Solar_systemA reader writes: "This is my friend, Ira Klotzko, he's got a doc. in Physics and a great sense of humor. I won't share his original plan for the depiction of Uranus...One we can share is how he jokes that the tattoo is really accurate because, as is the case with his waistline, the universe is always expanding."

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