Visualizing Science 2022: Illuminating the Intrinsic Beauty in Academic Research

September 23, 2022 • by Steven E. Franklin

The winners of our most recent Visualizing Science contest include an image related to “smart” material research, simulations of a meeting between a neutron star and a black hole and the connection between two wildly different areas of mathematics.


Winning Image
stimuli-responsive "smart" material
Newly settled coral polyps
Stomata comparison
neutron-star black-hole merger visualization
a triangular tiling of the hyperbolic plane
Saturation Fascination
Science is Me
Entrance to our Visualizing Science Showcase

Share


Three birds are shown. On the left is a blue jay, which is primarily blue with some patches of white on wing tips, around the face and on the chest. On the right is a green jay, which is primarily green with a lighter colored chest and a mix of blue and black patches on the face. In the center is a hybrid bird, which is primarily blue and resembles a blue jay, but with a larger area of black on the face, more akin to a green jay.

Research

So What Should We Call This – a Grue Jay?

Illustration shows how atom-thin materials enable control of individual photons of light

Texas Quantum Institute

Quantum Leap for STEM Graduate Training at UT

Against a backdrop of spinach leaves are old-time news clips with headlines "U.T. Scientists Find New Vitamins in Spinach: Why Popeye Has Big Msucles" and "New 'Life Staff' Found in Spinach" and "Three U.T. Scientists Discover New Vitamin"

UT News

4 Tons of Spinach, 3 Professors and 1 Life-Changing Discovery