Subscribe now

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


8 April 2020

Editor's pick - Lessons can be learned from the covid-19 crisis (1)

From Bryn Glover, Kirkby Malzeard, North Yorkshire, UK

David Adam argues that even the "best science" doesn't have the final word on covid-19 28 March, p 23 . Still, we should applaud the willingness of some politicians to respect the best advice the scientific community is able to offer. I hope that this is extended to other areas of policy, particularly climate change. …

15 April 2020

Looking forward to the time after the virus (1)

From Rob Carlton, De Pinte, Belgium

Adam Vaughan says the coronavirus pandemic is unlikely to have a significant direct effect on climate change, but I think there is still some cause for hope, even as the impact of the infection unfolds 4 April, p 10 . My optimism is drawn from the fact that the outbreak has demonstrated that the changes …

15 April 2020

Looking forward to the time after the virus (2)

From Jason Clements, Harrogate, North Yorkshire, UK

Within weeks, covid-19 has achieved what few people could have believed possible . Governments previously focused on austerity have deluged their citizens with money, and those citizens have, for the most part, readily acquiesced to the most stringent curbs on their liberty seen outside wartime. These changes have been driven by fear: of getting the …

15 April 2020

Thank you for breadth, depth and reliability (1)

From Andreas Rauch, Göttingen, Germany

You email me to describe contingency plans for subscribers. New Scientist is my best source for detailed, authoritative, accessible science information in general, and as I plan to survive this outbreak, I enthusiastically support whatever measures are necessary to ensure the safety and health of all its employees and business partners. You are all doing …

15 April 2020

Thank you for breadth, depth and reliability (2)

From Jacob Wighton, Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia

In the past few weeks, I have discovered the joy of print magazines. In the cacophony of constant breaking news about covid-19, the physical medium has provided a much calmer reading experience – and, in many cases, a window into the world as it was only recently, when everything made just a little bit more …

15 April 2020

Once-in-a-century events will keep happening

From Nigel Johnson, Nether Stowey, Somerset, UK

You call the current pandemic a "once-in-a-century event" ( 28 March, p 20 ). True, that is the elapsed time since the "Spanish flu" outbreak of 1918 to 1919, but this is no guide to the future. Since then, our population has quadrupled. The United Nations estimates that it was only in 2007 that the …

15 April 2020

Vitamin D could explain viruses' summer retreat

From Gerben Wierda, Heerlen, The Netherlands

You report on the beneficial effect of vitamin D on the innate immune system, our defence against primary infection with viruses such as the coronavirus ( 28 March, p 44 ). Research has shown that vitamin D protects against viral infections of the upper respiratory tract. Might this, rather than temperature, be the main reason …

15 April 2020

The paradox of efficiency and consumption

From Michael Moher, Ottawa, Canada

Edd Gent discusses an approach to thermodynamics that may improve the energy efficiency of data processing ( 14 March, p 40 ). This reminds me of work on steam engines in the 18th and 19th centuries, which led to the study of thermodynamics. The economist and philosopher William Stanley Jevons noted that consumption of coal …

15 April 2020

That's not why I want to curb the internet of things

From Bronek Kozicki, London, UK

Hugh Cooke is concerned by the carbon emissions of the rockets used to launch satellites to provide internet services, and the energy required to run the "internet of everything" (Letters, 21 March ). Yet pushing electrons is vastly cheaper than pushing people or goods. Granted, launching satellites is polluting, but I am convinced that this …

15 April 2020

Organic agriculture will still promote deforestation

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

Christel Cederberg and Hayo van der Werf say that the relationship between the lower yields of organic agriculture and additional demand for land is unclear ( 21 March, p 25 ). They point out that in Brazil, agricultural intensification coincided with increased deforestation, and say that this supports their argument. But it is clear that …

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