(Inside Science) -- It’s been a tough year. Again. And now, with the omicron variant quickly spreading through the world, it can be hard to remember that there was also good stuff in 2021.
Vaccines against the coronavirus became available and were distributed to billions of people around the world -- more than 8 billion doses, according to Our World in Data. And throughout 2021, amid the continuing pandemic, our team at Inside Science has provided a steady stream of science news about what’s been happening around the universe, in arenas from the cultural to the cosmic. Our coverage has included important discoveries, novel findings, and efforts to explain the strange and sometimes wonderful science found in our daily lives.
Our Inside Science team would like to thank our readers and viewers for making this another record year for visits to our website and YouTube channel. Thanks for sharing -- and indulging -- our curiosity about everything from whether bamboo could make good cricket bats to explaining how artificial intelligence can help find hidden roads.
We’ve been working hard to identify and answer your questions, including the ones you didn’t know you had. That’s where our fun begins, as we find new research and talk to the scientists and experts behind new discoveries.
Thanks also to our partners that syndicate our stories, including ABC News, Discover Magazine, and Astronomy Magazine. We’ve also been thrilled to have our stories mentioned in Esquire.com (Yes, Charles P. Pierce, it is always a good day for dinosaur news!) and Smithsonian.com, and recognized by Science Shortform’s science writing awards (Nala Rogers’ story on the sounds cicadas make certainly was terrific).
Our most popular stories published this year were:
If you liked those stories, you might also enjoy my coverage of Major League Baseball’s controversial move this season to change how it enforced rules against pitchers using sticky stuff on the mound.
Thanks everyone for watching our videos and reading our stories in 2021. Here’s to a better 2022.
Simulations reveal flow fields and aerodynamic coefficients for multiple tree spacings and arrangements, guiding urban planning and forestry management.