About
![Picture](/uploads/1/9/7/9/19791915/4386226.png)
My name is Nicolas and I was born in Chile. I moved to the U.S. when I was 11, and moved back to Chile five years later. I changed a lot during those 5 years. I'm really passionate about science now, specially physics. I think it's really interesting, and I want to spread this incredible subject to other people around the world, which is why I started this blog.
In my free time I like to watch TV (and lots of it!) and play guitar (mostly rock, but also classical guitar). I hope to become either a particle physicist or an astrophysicist, although there is some resistance from my family, seeing as physicists usually don't make very much money (which I don't really care about), but we'l see...
In this blog, I'll be posting what I think are the coolest parts of science, as well as the occasional rant (could be about science illiteracy, untrue stereotypes about science, or any other annoying thing that happens to be bothering me).
I used to think that science was a really boring, creativity-free part of life, but luckily that's changed now. What I want to do here is convince kids who think like the old me. I want to show them what I eventually learned; that science is our best tool for discovering the workings of the strange and wonderful world we live in.
Be sure to check out the real version of this blog, without any of my school's restrictions or assignments: Periodic Physics (link below).
In my free time I like to watch TV (and lots of it!) and play guitar (mostly rock, but also classical guitar). I hope to become either a particle physicist or an astrophysicist, although there is some resistance from my family, seeing as physicists usually don't make very much money (which I don't really care about), but we'l see...
In this blog, I'll be posting what I think are the coolest parts of science, as well as the occasional rant (could be about science illiteracy, untrue stereotypes about science, or any other annoying thing that happens to be bothering me).
I used to think that science was a really boring, creativity-free part of life, but luckily that's changed now. What I want to do here is convince kids who think like the old me. I want to show them what I eventually learned; that science is our best tool for discovering the workings of the strange and wonderful world we live in.
Be sure to check out the real version of this blog, without any of my school's restrictions or assignments: Periodic Physics (link below).