

Deepak Sridhar
2.2K posts




The members of a Catholic brotherhood in Malaga, Spain, carry a massive, 3.5-tonne platform reenacting Jesus' Last Supper for Easter during Semana Santa, or Holy Week, which takes place during the last week of Lent and coincides with Easter



“The total number of minds in the universe is one.” This thought-provoking statement comes from Erwin Schrödinger, best known for his famous cat paradox in quantum mechanics. Beyond physics, Schrödinger was deeply interested in the nature of consciousness. In his writings, he reflected on the unity of awareness, proposing that all individual minds may ultimately be expressions of a single, universal consciousness. The quote highlights his philosophical exploration of how mind and cosmos might be intimately connected, blending scientific curiosity with metaphysical insight.







@Fintech03 without Tomatoes, what kinda food were the Sanatanis & the Kings eating in India, prior to the 16th Century ? .. 😄


Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar and his uncle C. V. Raman form a rare Nobel legacy in one family. Raman won the 1930 Nobel Prize in Physics for discovering the Raman Effect, and Chandrasekhar followed decades later with the 1983 Nobel Prize for his profound work on the structure and evolution of stars.

Hidden Crystals in Your Brain’s ‘Third Eye’: Piezoelectric Microcrystals Discovered in the Pineal Gland – Turning Pressure into Electric Sparks! 🧠💎🔮” The discovery of tiny piezoelectric calcite microcrystals in the human pineal gland (the brain’s “third eye”) has scientists buzzing — these microscopic crystals can generate electrical signals under mechanical pressure, sparking fresh questions about the gland’s deeper role beyond just melatonin and sleep regulation. First identified in early 2000s studies (and now with renewed online discussion in 2025–2026), these calcite structures (<20 μm) show piezoelectric properties — meaning they convert mechanical stress (like subtle brain movements or vibrations) into tiny electrical charges. Advanced tools like scanning electron microscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and electron diffraction confirmed they’re made of calcium carbonate in unique hexagonal/trigonal forms, similar to crystals in the inner ear that help with balance. While mainstream science sticks to the pineal’s proven function in circadian rhythms and hormone production, researchers speculate these crystals could play a role in subtle neural signaling, electromagnetic sensitivity, or even bioelectromagnetic interactions (e.g., potential responses to fields). This finding underscores how much we still have to learn about the brain’s micro-scale wonders, blending biology, physics, and ongoing research into how these tiny “transducers” might influence everyday brain activity. #BrightBytes #Science #Health #Innovation #PinealGland #Piezoelectric So: Your Brain’s Hidden Crystals Just Got Weirder: Piezoelectric Microcrystals in the Pineal Gland – Science Meets the ‘Third Eye’ Mystery! 🧠💎” Here are video links (verified as of March 2026; these cover the calcite/piezoelectric topic: •Piezoelectric Crystals & the Human Pineal Gland youtube.com/watch?v=8cULVu… •Did you know the pineal gland has crystals that act as resonators?” instagram.com/reel/DSTe30ojH… •We’ve been told the Pineal Gland is just for sleep…but what if there is more?” instagram.com/reel/DVjeo8QFa… 👇sources : (verified primary/recent references): 1Bioelectromagnetics (2002) – Original study on calcite microcrystals & potential piezoelectricity: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12224052/ or full: onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.100…) 2IEEE Transactions (2004) – Second harmonic generation & piezoelectric transducers discussion: ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/12858… 3URSI Conference Paper (2002) – Characterization & electromechano-transduction role: ursi.org/proceedings/pr… 4PinealCode Blog (2026 update) – Modern summary of piezoelectricity in the pineal: pinealcode.com/blog/pineal-gl… 5Recent medRxiv preprint (2024, relevant context) – Meditation links & possible piezoelectric effects: medrxiv.org/content/10.110… This is grounded in established (mostly 2002-era) peer-reviewed findings with ongoing interest — however there have been no major new 2025/2026 breakthroughs, but this topic trends cyclically for its fascinating implications! 🚀


Mercury breaks the rules of how planets are supposed to behave, On Mercury, the Sun can literally move backwards in the sky, Boiling hot days. Freezing nights, No atmosphere to protect you.

My religion is whatever this is

Wow! A Chinese team just made a brilliant new method where one cell taken from an umbilical cord can be transformed into 14 MILLION cells that are designed to kill cancer. These are super super hard to engineer and so now being expanded at scale meaning it wont be an expensive luxury procedure, can be common place now for everyone!! To be fair the US is still a leader in commercialisation of cell therapies. But it still shows where the US struggles the most imo: industrialising manufacturing fast and cheaply. US innovation in this area is in an extremely expensive market with restricted access making it focus on premium pricing rather than for everyone like China are doing… The FDA even criticised the government policies on this last month saying the procedures are not“flexible” enough.


You are looking at a photo of Einstein’s actual notebook. The Zurich Notebook captures the exact moment Albert Einstein began reimagining gravity not as a force, but as the literal warping of space and time. In 1912, Albert Einstein returned to Zurich to tackle the greatest puzzle of his career: bridging the gap between relativity and gravity. Working with mathematician Marcel Grossmann, he filled the now-famous Zurich Notebook with dense handwriting and frantic calculations. This 96-page journal offers a raw, unedited glimpse into the mind of a genius at work. It reveals that the path to General Relativity was not a stroke of instant inspiration, but a messy, three-year struggle of trial and error where Einstein first explored the radical idea that space and time were not fixed, but curved. Using the tools of Riemannian geometry, Einstein began describing gravity as the physical warping of the universe's fabric. While the notebook shows he had not yet mastered the math, he was already asking the revolutionary questions that would redefine physics in 1915. This transition from chaotic drafts to a theory that explains black holes and the cosmos highlights the deeply human side of science. It serves as a powerful reminder that even the most profound insights into our reality start with a pencil, a notebook, and the persistence to work through mistakes until they become breakthroughs. source: University of Pittsburgh. (2012). A peek into Einstein's Zurich notebook. University of Pittsburgh.

🎗 In a revolutionary breakthrough, researchers from three leading American universities have discovered a method to destroy cancer cells using light, completely eliminating the need for drugs or chemotherapy. Early studies show an astonishing 99% success rate, offering unprecedented hope for millions battling this devastating disease. The technique, known as phototherapy at the cellular level, targets cancer cells with highly precise light wavelengths that cause them to break apart while leaving healthy cells unharmed. Unlike traditional treatments, this approach avoids the severe side effects of chemotherapy and radiation, providing a safer and more effective alternative. Experts say this discovery could transform cancer treatment worldwide. By harnessing light to selectively dismantle malignant cells, doctors may soon have a non-invasive therapy capable of treating various types of cancer, including those resistant to conventional methods. While further trials are needed before widespread use, this milestone represents a major leap forward in oncology, showing that cancer may one day be fought without the collateral damage caused by current treatments. The era of drug-free, targeted cancer therapy may be closer than ever.

Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, a German polymath, developed the binary numeral system (base-2) in 1679. This system, which uses only two digits (0 and 1), is the foundation of virtually all modern computing and digital technology. ✍️



