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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


18 September 2024

Are we here to solve a wicked problem?

From Rob Walter, Canberra, Australia

Living in a simulation wouldn't get rid of the need to solve climate change – in fact, it may amplify it. If reality is a simulation, then it must have been created for some purpose. Since the most common use of simulations is research, it is possible we have been created to answer some question …

18 September 2024

Call off Artemis and give cash to Chanda instead

From John Butcher, Sunbury-on-Thames, Surrey, UK

Sending humans into space is a total waste of time and money. What should we do with the funds instead? Give some to columnist Chanda Prescod-Weinstein to keep the Chandra X-ray Observatory running. The rest can be spent on many more scientific instruments that need funding ( 24 August, p 20 ).

18 September 2024

Using maths to drive even more efficiently

From Eric Kvaalen, Les Essarts-le-Roi, France

Research shows we shouldn't slam on the brakes at a red light, but rather start slowing down before, in order to cut emissions. But it depends. When I come around a corner and see a red light ahead of me and no cars between me and it, I don't brake – I push the clutch …

18 September 2024

The blob can play, but can it actually think?

From John Cantellow, Derby, UK

You report that a blob of jelly can play the game Pong thanks to a basic memory. To me, this implies some form of synthetic cognition, especially since the polymer used utilises ion transport, the same "technology" employed throughout the human body, including the brain ( 31 August, p 13 ). This and similar experiments …

18 September 2024

Taking the scenic route: IKEA got there first

From Brian Reffin Smith, Berlin, Germany

A reader's suggestion of encouraging healthy mobility in an office by designing a necessity for longer walks seems innovative, but surely stores such as IKEA have been doing this for decades. However, the health gain of being shunted past acres of bedding and lighting to get to a dinner plate might be negated by the …

18 September 2024

Unimpressed by the new wave of AI chatbots

From Richard Prior, Beaworthy, Devon, UK

I applaud Michael Crowe for calling out "so-called AI". Maybe I am not alone after all in finding the current crop of AI assistants like a pack of over-eager office boys getting under my feet and clamouring to tie my shoelaces ( Letters, 31 August ). Ironically, I find myself torn between the temptation to …

18 September 2024

Realism seems unlikely in quantum mechanics

From Nick Canning, Coleraine, County Londonderry, UK

Evidence seems to contradict the proposed realistic interpretation of quantum mechanics ( 7 September, p 32 ). That evidence is Nobel laureate Anton Zeilinger's "entanglement transfer" experiment. It involves two entangled pairs of photons. The polarisation of one of each pair is separately measured. Only much later, after either passing through a device that entangles …

25 September 2024

Wind-powered cargo ship is hopefully just the start

From Jonathan Seagrave, Bristol, UK

The maiden voyage of the sailing cargo ship Anemos, with its load of cognac and champagne, is excellent news. However, bulk transport of iron ore etc., which accounts for a large chunk of maritime emissions, must also be made in vessels that use wind as a primary power source ( 7 September, p 15 ). …

25 September 2024

Try this cycling trick to make driving smoother

From Peter Jacobsen, Port Townsend, Washington, US

While computer modelling of smoother "eco-driving" shows a reduction in emissions, the question of how to encourage it remains. There are some ideas from the cycling world. One city placed indicator lights on a major street's bike lane 110 metres in advance of a traffic light for riders that signalled how long until the signal …

25 September 2024

Valkyrie – personal pronouns, she and her

From Sam Edge, Ringwood, Hampshire, UK

You report that the Woodside engineers call NASA's Valkyrie robot "Val" and talk about it in feminine terms. For anyone wondering why, the valkyries were female beings in Norse myths ( 14 September, p 14 ).

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