91É«Ç鯬

Letters archive

Join the conversation in New Scientist's Letters section, where readers can share their thoughts and opinions on articles and see responses from experts and enthusiasts across a range of science topics. To submit a letter, please see our terms and email letters@newscientist.com


26 February 2025

End of the multiverse? End of a whole branch of sci-fi!

From Malcolm Moore, Rotorua, New Zealand

Are you kidding? No multiverse, no parallel Earths? Do the physicists killing off the many-worlds idea have no conscience? A whole subgenre of sci-fi is damned to extinction. Gone, vanished down a literary black hole with just a few dog-eared remnants littering the non-event horizon. Me? I'm just finishing an Adrian Tchaikovsky book involving... oh, …

26 February 2025

'Useless' ear muscle gives me a sixth sense

From Gerald Legg, Hurstpierpoint, West Sussex, UK

I can slightly move the "useless" muscle that lets some people wiggle their ears. Of more interest is that I feel the muscle slightly twitch when someone/something approaches outside of my visual field. It feels almost like a sixth sense, but obviously it is linked to my auditory system picking up a sound I don't …

26 February 2025

Another vote against fighting fire with fire

From Nina Burdett, Malmsbury, Victoria, Australia

In fire-prone southern Australia, intentional burning to combat wildfire risk is controversial. These burns run for weeks every autumn and the smoke is a health and environmental hazard ( 1 February, p 12 ). The effect on wildlife and plants seems to be rarely taken into account. Fire does reduce fine, easily burned plant matter, …

26 February 2025

Defossilised polyester needs hot and dirty gases

From Charlie Wartnaby, Cambridge, UK

LanzaTech's fermentation process to make "defossilised" polyester appears to need more reactive inputs, which is why it favours hot blast furnace exhaust that contains carbon monoxide and hydrogen, as well as carbon dioxide, rather than the cool, pure, waste CO 2 streams that reader Dave Covell suggested ( Letters, 1 February ).

26 February 2025

Adventure and curiosity drive us to colonise Mars

From Steph Györy, Sydney, Australia

Paul Friedlander says past colonisation has been a hunt for opportunities to trade or get rich, hence the same will apply to Mars. This leaves out one of the strongest drivers: curiosity/adventure. It is often assumed that billionaires are motivated by money, but if you look at Martian colony proponent Elon Musk's track record, he …

5 March 2025

Spreading rock dust to save climate is a problem (1)

From Malcolm Black, Middle LaHave, Nova Scotia, Canada

You report the idea that the use of crushed rock on agricultural land to capture carbon may also alter Earth's reflectivity. However, this geoengineering proposal isn't practical. A millimetre-thick layer of rock per hectare weighs around 20 tonnes. Extended to 1.5 billion hectares of cropped land in the world, and that is a lot of …

5 March 2025

Spreading rock dust to save climate is a problem (2)

From Richard Black, Belchford, Lincolnshire, UK

I wonder if any change in reflectivity due to spreading crushed rock on farmland would only occur where there was no crop cover. And would the rock deplete carbon dioxide where crop seedlings grow, reducing viability? I suspect this method would be only for areas with no plant cover.

5 March 2025

This is the real hallmark of alien intelligence

From Hillary Shaw, Newport, Shropshire, UK

The problem with recognition of alien intelligence raised in your review of Adrian Tchaikovsky's book Shroud was also tackled in a short sci-fi story from the 1970s, in which some humans get stuck on a very warm and humid planet where every artefact they have rapidly rusts or rots. Aliens arrive, assume they are indigenous …

5 March 2025

Some history on new visions of the future

From Xavier Duran, Barcelona, Spain

While Filippo Tommaso Marinetti is said to have founded futurism in 1909, the word was actually created in 1904 by Catalan writer Gabriel Alomar at a Barcelona conference ( 8 February, p 22 ). His was an aesthetic movement, but also a political one, in a sense opposite to Marinetti's. Alomar was unequivocally democrat, Catalanist …

5 March 2025

We see evolutionary mismatch all around

From Denis Watkins, St Just in Roseland, Cornwall, UK

Beth Morrell makes the excellent point that the modern world is grossly mismatched to the one in which we evolved. The restraints of our evolution on our thinking are there to be seen in our actions. We continue to wreck the planet, render its air toxic, pollute rivers, destroy wildlife and slaughter our own kind. …

Sign up to our weekly newsletter

Receive a weekly dose of discovery in your inbox. We'll also keep you up to date with New Scientist events and special offers.

Sign up
Piano Exit Overlay Banner Mobile Piano Exit Overlay Banner Desktop