Where the Cicadas Are, 2013

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The video is for listening, mostly. I know it’s cicada season and brood II was supposed to be big in places along the mid-Atlantic and northeast, but I had only heard a few buzzes thus far — where I live and work were inundated back in 2004 by brood X, and I don’t know how much that crowds out other groups. It makes sense we wouldn’t have a big brood XI, if the hordes from the previous year allowed a predator population explosion, but I’ve seen some in other years and expected more this year.

But once I got outside of town to go geocaching, I saw (and heard) swarms. The background sound that’s reminiscent of the phaser sound on the original Star Trek is the chorus, and then there’s the other chirping/buzzing. And it was LOUD. It’s interesting that the buzzing comes and goes, like a resonance. It’s like one cicada starts calling and the others join in because they don’t want to be left out of advertising to the ladies.

I had one land on me and start calling, which was a little weird because all of the sudden there’s this screaming sound coming from a different place than the background. Plus, I’m not his type. Unfortunately I didn’t bring my slo-mo camera; there was a lot of flying about going on, which I’d like to capture. Maybe all the factors will cooperate next weekend.

One is the Loneliest Number

The Lone Genius Hypothesis

[T]here are times when I sit alone in my office and scribble equations. There are times when I sit outside and stare and think. But, to be honest, those times are usually not especially productive. When I really make progress, when I really have breakthroughs — those are always times when I’m talking to other physicists and astronomers, chewing through new ideas and checking that I’m on the right track. And even more often, the most important work we do is what grows organically from our conversations or e-mails or paper perusals.