My Recent Work

Solid Air

Waterproof, fireproof, and translucent, the lightest solid known on planet earth is now structurally sound enough to support 2,000 times its own weight. One cubic inch of this substance, collapsed, covers a football field. Comprised of 99% air, expertly engineered “frozen clouds” have taken over NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Born during a bet between two chemists one hundred years prior, sheets of this material now grace the Pentagon. Previously employed to construct Cerenkov detectors in particle physics, aerogel has been tasked with retrieving interstellar cosmic dust. Nanostructured material in lattice formation trap thermal energy from escaping.
From next-gen spacesuits to biocompatible implants, its potential for cryogenic fluid storage, supercapacitors, and insulating rocket fuel have secured its standing in the scientific community. Lighter than glass, newly reinforced polymer-based formulas are able to withstand the force of bullets.
Playing a crucial role in fusion fuel experiments, it also shows future promise in the field of nuclear experimentation as a shield to protect from radioactive waste. As a longtime personal friend and schoolmate of Space Operations Officer Robert Tilli, honored member of the U.S. Space Force Division, I eagerly anticipate applications in the cosmos. A miracle in its own right, aerogel may just be the answer.

Palm Pay

Amazon One is a groundbreaking payment option born of the need for contactless commerce due to social distancing constraints ushered in during the coronavirus standstill. In a world where fingerprints could replace human tender in the checkout lane, the possibilities are exponential. Advantages include the elimination of most common methods used to commit fraud. Electronic scanning guns known as skimmers, devised to scan card numbers from a clandestine location by weaponizing radio signals, as well as their sister “shimmers,” prove no match for the new technology. (It follows that, in future, theft may necessitate human cloning). As an alternative to counting currency during routine errands, palm pay also carries the potential to prevent theft on a mass scale. For example, in emergencies, palm pay could streamline the purchase process for prescription medication. Without the need to transport a wallet, humanity is approaching an era of transactions tied to biomarkers. As sixteen digit numbers offer trillions of combinations, the human genome contains infinite. This trajectory aligns with that of massive companies such as Mastercard aiming to phase out visible credit card numbers completely by the year 2030. In tandem with “Just Walk Out,” a program scanning facial features to facilitate a seamless customer journey, it is taking the world by storm.

Chokin’ in the Sea

The Huntington Beach oil spill served as a wake-up call decimating the natural ecosystem of the Southern Californian shore. The morning of October 2, 2021, saw a sixteen-mile stretch of Pacific coastline reflecting an insidious coat of petroleum.
One gallon of crude oil has the potential to pollute up to one million gallons of water, meaning 25 billion gallons of water were ultimately poisoned as a direct result of the Amplify pipeline explosion. Struck by multiple anchors in passing, the pipe cracked before ultimately expelling its contents on aquatic fauna. The National Transportation Safety Board traced the incident to multiple container ships, namely the MSC Danit and Cosco Beijing. Despite a series of alerts sounding accurately from the leak detection network located at their Beta Field facility, company employees disregarded the above as false alarms.
Local marine life at Laguna bore witness to the biohazard. Suffocating vibrant underwater fronds by shielding sunlight from facilitating vital interactions among symbiotic algae, kelp forests coated in fuel surfaced a shade of obsidian. Meanwhile, recovery timelines for reefs span decades to centuries. In response, Governor Newsom declared a state of emergency to address the environmental impact. Public beaches were shut down for over a week, as mobilized cleanup crews extracted toxic waste and bituminous debris, primarily tar balls and oiled sand. Further prompting class action lawsuits on the part of civilians directly devastated by the oversight, this Texas company’s breach has ignited national outrage, with contamination likely to persist for the next decade.