New Scientist - USA (2021-02-13)

(Antfer) #1
13 February 2021 | New Scientist | 55

Tom Gauld


for New Scientist


Answers


1 kilogram of carbon dioxide
equivalent (CO 2 e). This unit is
a measure of carbon footprint,
expressed in terms of the amount
of carbon dioxide that would
have the same impact over a
100-year period.
E-readers are slightly better
than paper books, as long as you
use them many times. In my book
How Bad Are Bananas?, I estimate
their carbon footprint to be about
36 kg CO 2 e, so you have to read the
equivalent of at least 36 paperback
books (bought new, then recycled)
in e-book format before the paper
saving outweighs the emissions
embodied in the device.
Newspapers are a bit different as
there is far more paper produced
per hour of reading time
compared with books. I calculate
that a newspaper such as the UK’s
Guardian has a climate impact
of 0.37 kg CO 2 e if it is recycled, but
this is probably on the low side
as it doesn’t take into account the
footprint of journalism, such as
offices and flights taken by writers.
The big weekend newspapers
with supplements have a much


bigger impact. Getting two of
these a week for a year has an
impact of around 200 kg CO 2 e,
similar to a flight from London
to Barcelona. Here, online wins.
Using a smartphone to access the
internet for an hour a day has an
impact of 63 kg CO 2 e over a year.
It is crucial to recycle newspapers
because they emit the potent
greenhouse gas methane when
they rot in landfill sites, and
for each one that isn’t recycled,
another newspaper’s worth of
new paper has to be made.
But both reading online or in
paper format is a good thing to do
if the content helps you become
aware of the world, the climate
crisis and what we can do about it.
And reading itself is a low-carbon
activity because it is hard to shop
or drive while you read.

Cover-up


When you wash a duvet cover,
why does other washing end
up in it? (continued)

Keith Macpherson
Clevedon, Somerset, UK
In a previous response (31 October
2020), David Muir showed that,
during his washing cycle, an
average of 4.6 out of 10 socks
migrate into a duvet cover and
5.6 out of 10 escape.
However, his research leads
to an even more interesting
thought: during a wash, many
socks must be transiting in and
out all the time and all we see is
the final result.

Talia Morris
Cape Tribulation, Queensland,
Australia
Previously, Brian King described
duvet covers as “textiferous (the
textile equivalent of a carnivore)”.
Textiferous means bears or
carries fabric. The term should be
“textivorous” (eats fabric). Trust
me, I’m a linguist. ❚

Quick quiz #88
Answers

1 Epilepsy

2 Agapornis

3 Five

4 The hypothalamus

5 Theobromine

Cryptic crossword
#50 Answers

ACROSS 1 Surfactant, 7 Tudor,
8 Burette, 10 Strains, 11 Volta,
12 Enough, 14 Elicit, 16 Avert,
17 Uranium, 19 Tactile, 20 Laser,
21 Permafrost

DOWN 2 Undercover cop,
3 Fermi, 4 Cubist, 5 Arrival, 6 Total
eclipses, 7 Tesseract, 9 Elastomer,
13 Gutsier, 15 Eureka, 18 Adler

#99 Around
the clock^
Solution

It is 2 o’clock. We don’t know
how many numbers are in the
right position, but we are told
that if we did know this, we
could work out the time.

There are several orientations in
which no number is in the right
place. If just one number is in the
right position, it could be 1, 3, 6
or 10. If three are in the right
position, then those three might
be 4,9,11 or 5, 7, 12. However,
if two are in the right place, those
numbers can only be 2 and 8.

The hour hand is pointing at 2
which is in the correct position,
so the time is 2 o’clock. If the
pranksters have painted XI and
IX upside down, there is still only
one pair of numbers that could
be in the correct position.

“ E-readers are better
than paper books
if used many times
so the paper saving
outweighs the device’s
embodied emissions”
Free download pdf