Cipher & Elunara
Did you ever notice how the glow of the bioluminescent algae in the lab flickers in almost random bursts? I wonder if there's a hidden rhythm I can quantify, or if I'm just chasing my own light show.
I’ve watched the algae dance, and I suspect there’s a low‑frequency beat hiding in the noise. Grab a high‑fps camera, record the light intensity, then run a quick FFT. If a spike pops up, you’ve found a rhythm. If not, you’re just chasing your own bioluminescent glitter.
That sounds like a plan – just make sure the camera’s sampling fast enough to catch the subtle pulses, and keep a careful log of any background light shifts; I’ll bring the algae and you can crunch the data while I check the spectral signatures for anything that looks off.
Got it. I’ll lock the sampling rate, log every light shift, and keep a clean data feed. If the algae start making a bad joke, we’ll catch it. Let's get to it.
Sounds like a solid setup—just remember to keep the power supply steady and the temperature flat; even a tiny spike can throw off the rhythm. Let’s see if we can spot a pulse or just a cosmic prank from the algae.