BBC Knowledge June 2017

(Jeff_L) #1

PHOTOS: GETTY ILLUSTRATIONS: RAJA LOCKEY



  1. WATER
    You can only survive three days without
    water. Scavenge the beach for containers
    and set each one in the sand, at the bottom
    of a wide, shallow pit. Line the sides
    with palm leaves, arranged so that rain
    drips into the bottles. While you wait
    for rain, explore the island to look
    for streams.

  2. FOOD
    Coconuts are a great food source. Wedge
    one on the ground, with the pointed end
    facing upwards. Find the largest rock you
    can lift and drop it onto the coconut to break
    the husk fibres apart. One survivor of the
    2004 tsunami ate nothing but coconuts for
    25 days before being rescued,
    so your chances are good!

  3. SHELTER
    Unless you can sleep, you will lose the ability
    to concentrate, plan and stay motivated
    after just one or two nights. A bundle
    of small branches spread on the ground
    and covered with palm leaves is still
    better than sleeping directly on the sand.
    After that, build a low bed frame by tying
    saplings together..


How could I survive being washed up on a desert island?


THE THOUGHT EXPERIMENT

During the 1990s, astronomers measuring the rate
at which the Universe is expanding made a shock
discovery: it’s actually accelerating, as if the whole
cosmos is being propelled by some invisible source
of energy. This is so-called dark energy and its origin
is one of the deepest mysteries in science. Various
explanations have been put forward, with arguably
the simplest being that it’s a manifestation of so-called
quantum vacuum processes. According to the laws
of the subatomic world, there is always some uncertainty
about the amount of energy filling even empty space.
This vacuum fluctuation energy has been detected in
the lab, and theorists have shown it can have
the ‘anti-gravitational’ effects of dark matter. So far,
however, they have struggled to produce a detailed
theory of its cosmic effects. This has led to suggestions
that dark energy may simply be a force-field left over from
the Big Bang. Sometimes called quintessence,
it’s capable of getting stronger over time, but again
details remain elusive. There have even been claims that
dark energy is leaking out from hidden extra dimensions
of space that failed to expand following the Big Bang.
Until there’s a breakthrough in the underlying theory,
however, all this is little more than speculation. RM

WHAT IS


DARK ENERGY?


June 2017 13

The Dark Energy
Camera in Chile helps
scientists study the
expansion of space
Free download pdf