
Are the James Webb Space Telescope’s Pictures ‘Real’?
How the JWST’s cosmic images are made

Jen Christiansen is senior graphics editor at Scientific American. Follow Christiansen on Twitter @ChristiansenJen

How the JWST’s cosmic images are made

Detailed data about a host of physical and chemical forces are shaping a new view of the sea

Graphics show how the two weather extremes will more often pair up

Visualizing ongoing stories of loss, adaptation and inequality

Chemical analyses showed an individual mammoth made an epic journey across Alaska

About 80 conditions can be described as autoimmune disorders, although definitions are still changing

A new study found large species are rare, but those with fewer individuals are abundant

Blood and the gut dominate cell turnover

Some days we gain one minute; some days we gain three

Blood levels change as people alter diets and the use of statin medications

Genetic engineering could allow for speedy production as well

A classic data visualization brought an astronomical curiosity to music lovers

How the words we use have evolved over the past 175 years

What scientists know about the inner workings of the pathogen that has infected the world

The magazine’s hues provide a record of publishing technology and trends

Where does the illustrator end and the infographer begin? How does data visualization fit in? And what does science have to say about the design decisions we make?

Even with social media, we max out at 150 real relationships

Graphics from the Scientific American archive provide a glimpse of the history and science of pyrotechnics


Data visualizers Martin Krzywinski and Jake Lever map city centers for an annual Pi Day art exploration
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