Podme logo
HemUpptäckKategorierSökStudent
Global Carbon Emissions; Parker Solar Probe and simulating swaying buildings

Global Carbon Emissions; Parker Solar Probe and simulating swaying buildings

31:542019-12-05

Om avsnittet

Reports from the UN Climate Change Conference (COP 25) in Madrid are saying that global warming is increasing and that we're not doing enough, fast enough, to change things. The World Meteorological Organisation's provisional State of the Climate 2019 report lists atmospheric carbon dioxide reaching record levels. Global mean temperatures for Jan-Oct 2019 were 1.1+/-0.1 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. The Arctic ice extent minimum in Sept 2019 was the second lowest on satellite record. Tropical cyclone Idai was the strongest cyclone known to make landfall. These are all concerning statistics. According to the Global Carbon Emissions figures that have just been released, carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is still increasing: the slightly good news is that the rate of increase has slowed. Adam Rutherford talks to climate expert at the Tyndall Centre at the University of East Anglia, Corinne Le Le Quéré, to find out more. “Safe as houses" is a cliché built on the solidity of the buildings we put up. But at Bath University engineers are working in the opposite direction. They are asking just how strong does a building have to be - especially in an age of ever taller sky-scrapers, which inevitably sway, particularly when the wind picks up. It's not that there's any danger they'll fall down - but the movement can be unsettling to the occupants. So they've developed a virtual tower - a windowless cabin not much bigger than a caravan stuck on top of a set of hydraulic pistons with virtual reality screens to mimic window views that allow psychologists to monitor volunteers' experiences of living and working in high, flexible spaces. Our Sun is so much more than a giant ball of burning gas. Its core is a nuclear reactor which creates billions of looping and tangling magnetic fields. Its layers are puzzling variations of hot temperatures and its solar wind has some very peculiar properties. These are just some of the reasons NASA launched its Parker Solar Probe in August 2018 on a mission to get close (3.8 million miles) to our star’s surface and study its properties. The first scientific reports from the mission are out and solar expert Professor Lucie Green at UCL reveals what the car-sized, armour-plated craft has been finding out so far. She says "our Sun is more dynamic than expected and we might be getting clues to why the sun spins more slowly than theory predicts." Producer - Fiona Roberts

Senaste avsnitten

BBC Inside Science
BBC Inside Science

Ugly animals and asteroid Apophis

2024-05-3028min
BBC Inside Science
BBC Inside Science

Can we get plastic waste under control?

2024-05-2327min
BBC Inside Science
BBC Inside Science

Do we need a new model of cosmology?

2024-05-1631min
BBC Inside Science
BBC Inside Science

Bird flu outbreak in cows

2024-05-0931min
BBC Inside Science
BBC Inside Science

200 years of dinosaur science

2024-05-0227min
BBC Inside Science
BBC Inside Science

Inside Your Microbiome

2024-04-2528min
BBC Inside Science
BBC Inside Science

Our Accidental Universe

2024-04-1836min
BBC Inside Science
BBC Inside Science

World’s oldest forest fossils

2024-04-1128min
BBC Inside Science
BBC Inside Science

How pure is the water from your tap?

2024-04-0428min
BBC Inside Science
BBC Inside Science

Dimming the Sun

2024-03-2833min
logo

PODME

INFORMATION

  • Om kakor
  • Allmänna villkor
  • Integritetspolicy
  • Press

LADDA NED APPEN

app storegoogle play store

REGION

flag
  • sweden_flag
  • norway_flag
  • finland_flag

© Podme AB 2024