Spyke

New research shows that the insects flying around the streetlights are in fact in a living hell that we made for bugs.

New research shows that the insects flying around the streetlights are in fact in a living hell that we made for bugs.

@science

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-44785-3

Essentially, their tiny bug brains think the light is the sunset, so they keep turning to keep the "sun" at the same angle so they can go "straight." No matter how far they fly, they don't make any progress. They are trapped in this little hell we made just for them, not understanding why they can't get to where they are going.

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mander.xyz

They are trapped in this little hell we made just for them, not understanding why they can’t get to where they are going.

same

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lemmy.world

All the best scientific articles use phrases like "in living hell".

So sciencey.

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lemmy.world

What?

Hell is the most scientific of all locations.

Hail science!!!

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lemmy.world

Are they getting much science done down there? Obviously it must be helpful that all of history's greatest scientific minds are gathered in one place -- but if nobody's serving them breakfast then maybe they're perpetually hypoglycemic and not doing much good thinking.

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lemmy.world

One evening I built a campfire to keep warm on the banks of a river in southern France. As the fire got going, millions of moths poured from the trees into the flames. As the numbers increased the flames leapt higher, and the moths became the fuel. The horror, the horror…

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@alvvayson Existing research was about "how do we stop the bugs from circling our lights?". This is about *why* the bugs circle the lights. It artificially triggers the dorsal reflex, which disorients the bugs.

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XeroxCoolreply
lemmy.world

Which LEDs? LEDs are pretty much all giving off the same two colors to make white: blue and yellow (in a single chip made of a blue LED and yellow uv-reactive phosphor). Warm white, cool white, same thing just varying intensities of each color. Only cheap color-changing LEDs (now) will use R/G/B chips lit together without dedicated white chips. What wavelengths are they tracking?

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modifierreply
lemmy.ca

Shout out Shuji Nakamura, inventor of the blue LED. Kinda broke the whole thing wide open.

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Watched that video last night. That was more fascinating than it had any right to be.

I've been an electronics nerd since the 70s, and somehow never noticed blue LEDs becoming a thing.

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dice.camp

@Shkshkshk @science I read this too a few weeks ago, and it got the old noggin joggin'.

What if some higher lifeform has done the same to us? Our sun could be the gods' bathroom light.

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