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Penn Engineers Discover a New Class of Materials That Passively Harvest Water from Air
(blog.seas.upenn.edu)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
I really don't like the repeated use of the phrase "defy the laws of physics." That's an extraordinary claim, and it needs extraordinary proof, and the researchers already propose a mechanism by which the droplets remained stable under existing physical laws, namely that they were getting replenished from the nanopores inside the material as fast as evaporation was pulling water out of the droplets.
I recognize the researchers themselves aren't using the phrase, it's the Penn press release organization trying to further drum up interest in the research. But it's a bad framing. You can make it sound interesting without resorting to clickbait techniques like "did our awesome engineers just break the laws of physics??" Hell, the research is interesting enough on its own; passive water collection from the air is revolutionary! No need for editorializing!
Yeah, science communicators need to not evaluate themselves by the same metrics as newspapers and magazines. Getting people to click and share should not be the metric of success.
It also somewhat instils distrust in science IMO, goes along the "eggs were bad for our health just 10y ago" type of argument
Those Egg Council creeps got to you too, eh?
Yeah, why pretend physics are being broken when we could instead discuss the fact that we're one step closer to having moisture farming as a profession!