Each year, tens of thousands of people from around the country make their way to Nevada’s Black Rock Desert for a week-long festival known as Burning Man. It’s a celebration of art and self-expression, but it’s also permeated with science and technology. WCAI on-air host and Living Lab production assistant Alecia Orsini went to Burning Man this year with a mission – to find all the science she could.

Some of the projects she encountered included a camp melting Playa dust into glass, Cosmic Praise - a three story tower with spark chamber inside that would light up when cosmic rays passed through it, the first-ever Black Rock Observatory and a sound reactive dome of light called Sound Puddle. Burning Man is a harsh place to live, let alone build science inspired art.

It is also a place to collaborate and experiment. John English, creator of Sound Puddle, described the festival this way "I identify Burning Man as engineering sport." Many of the Burners who Alecia encountered echoed this sentiment, that if you wanted to show of your "high voltage" science art, this was the place to do it.
Wonder what Sound Puddle looked like? Here is a short video of the glowing dome.
Dragon Man demonstrates his gift "Burnie the Worm"