Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Polaris of Enlightenment

Nuclear war would wipe out the Swedes

Published 29 September 2024
– By Editorial Staff
Sweden would be very badly affected by a nuclear war.
4 minute read

A study by a group of American researchers shows that Sweden would be one of the countries hardest hit by a nuclear war between the US and Russia. According to a simulation of such a scenario, 99% of Swedes would not survive, not because of the bombing itself, but mainly because of the global mass starvation that would follow.

In the study, published in Nature Food, the researchers assume that the nuclear war in question would be directed at cities, causing firestorms that would in turn produce huge amounts of soot in the upper atmosphere, blocking sunlight and cooling the planet. They conclude that a week of such warfare would reduce crop yields by 90%, even four years after the war had ended.

– Even countries far away from conflict regions are put at risk by nuclear conflict, says Lili Xia, co-author of the study.

In the researchers’ “nightmare scenario”, more than five billion people worldwide could starve to death after a nuclear war between the United States and Russia – but even a smaller nuclear conflict, for example between Pakistan and India, is estimated to destroy global food production and lead to up to 2.5 billion deaths. According to the study, food shortages would cause far more deaths than nuclear weapons themselves.

– The data tells us one thing: We need to prevent a nuclear war from ever happening, says climate scientist and study co-author Alan Robock.

The war in Ukraine and the escalation over Taiwan have raised global fears of a nuclear conflict, and scientists say the whole world would be severely affected by such a scenario.

They also point out that wars, conflicts and coronavirus policies have already disrupted and negatively affected global food production, with almost 200 million more people facing food shortages than before and countries such as India and Malaysia restricting food exports. The fear of global conflict itself could also very likely lead to further export restrictions or bans and more countries choosing to keep all food for themselves.

– The psychological impact could be greater than the real damage, says food scientist William Chen, who believes that to cope with global instability, countries need to start focusing on more food sources, such as mushroom farms, large-scale indoor farming – and microalgae and insects.

– These do not require much space. They can be grown in your kitchen or underground and are less affected by an environment exposed to nuclear war, he argues.

‘Would cause unprecedented climate change’

It is estimated that there are between 12,000 and 13,000 nuclear weapons in existence today. According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Russia has 5,977 nuclear weapons and the US 5,428. China is thought to have around 350 nuclear weapons, France 290, the UK 225, Pakistan 165 and India around 160. Israel and North Korea also have nuclear weapons – 90 and 20 respectively, according to the Peace Research Institute’s own count.

– A full-scale nuclear war would cause climate change unprecedented in human history… In a US-Russian nuclear war, more people would starve to death in India and Pakistan alone than in the countries actually fighting the war, says Mr Robock.

The immediate effects of nuclear war have been widely recognised since the US dropped the ‘Little Boy’ bomb on Hiroshima in 1945. It killed an estimated 140 000 people in five months and destroyed two-thirds of the city’s buildings.

But it was only in the late 1980s that the long-term effects began to be studied in earnest, and in the worst-case scenario it is believed that radioactive dust and smoke would block out much of the sun’s light, causing temperatures to plummet and much of the world’s crops to simply die off – the same fate that is estimated could befall billions of people around the world.

In the worst-case scenario, a nuclear war between the US and Russia would cause the Earth’s surface temperature to drop by as much as 16 degrees Celsius – a huge impact on almost all life. The researchers behind the study also note that, in addition to starvation and disruption of social functions, large parts of the water system would become radioactive and unsafe to drink.

It is also estimated that the fires caused by the bombs release 100 to 1000 times the energy of the bombs themselves. When the huge amount of smoke is blown into the stratosphere, it cannot be dispersed because it does not rain there, and it stays there for years.

‘Banning nuclear weapons is the only long-term solution’

Since the end of the Cold War, the number of nuclear weapons has decreased, but the number of countries possessing nuclear weapons has increased. China is also estimated to be planning to quadruple its arsenal to over 1,000 nuclear weapons by the end of the decade.

“All nuclear-armed states are expanding or modernising their arsenals, and most are also intensifying their nuclear rhetoric and the role of nuclear weapons in their military strategies”, writes the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

– When nuclear weapons exist, they can be used, and the world has come close to nuclear war several times. Banning nuclear weapons is the only long-term solution, says Robock, adding that the nine nuclear-armed countries need to listen to science and the rest of the world.

Seth Baum, executive director of the US think-tank Global Catastrophic Risk Institute, calls the climate models ‘excellent’, but says there are many factors and uncertainties in exactly how humanity would respond to a global catastrophe of this magnitude, making the estimated death toll in the various scenarios difficult to assess

Martin Goliath, a nuclear weapons researcher at the Swedish Defence Research Agency, calls the study ‘interesting’ but says that the amount of soot formation is uncertain and that several of the scenarios are unlikely.

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New mini-moon discovered orbiting Uranus

Published 21 August 2025
– By Editorial Staff
Uranus captured in 2023 by the James Webb Space Telescope. Illustration of some of Uranus' moons as well as the new one.
1 minute read

NASA has discovered a new mini-moon orbiting the planet Uranus. The moon is only 10 kilometers wide.

The new moon was discovered in February using the James Webb Space Telescope. Researchers believe the moon previously went unnoticed due to its small size and faint brightness – so much so that even the Voyager 2 spacecraft missed it when it passed by Uranus 40 years ago.

This becomes the 29th moon discovered around Uranus, and it’s not the first time a smaller moon has been found. About half of the planet’s moons are small, which is unusual for a planet.

No other planet has as many small inner moons as Uranus, and their complex inter-relationships with the rings hint at a chaotic history that blurs the boundary between a ring system and a system of moons, says Matthew Tiscareno from the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California, who is part of NASA’s research team and continues:

Moreover, the new moon is smaller and much fainter than the smallest of the previously known inner moons, making it likely that even more complexity remains to be discovered.

May receive name from Shakespeare

The moon has not yet been given a name, but all other moons are named after characters from Shakespeare and Alexander Pope, such as Miranda, Ariel, Umbriel, Titania and Oberon.

Before it can receive an official name, the discovery must be approved by the International Astronomical Union (IAU), which is the leading authority for assigning official names and designations to astronomical objects.

Comet from another solar system approaches Earth

Published 12 August 2025
– By Editorial Staff
The comet has not yet developed a tail, but has a "teardrop-shaped cocoon of dust".
2 minute read

A rare comet is approaching our solar system – but it will pass at a safe distance. In September, it may become visible to amateur telescopes.

The comet was discovered on July 1 this year by the Atlas telescope in Chile and was given the name 3I/Atlas. It is the third interstellar object ever observed passing through our solar system – hence the number three in its name. The two previous objects are 1I/’Oumuamua, discovered in 2017, and 2I/Borisov, discovered in 2019. The letter “I” stands for interstellar.

When NASA photographed the comet with the Hubble telescope on July 21, it was located approximately 447 million kilometers from Earth. Although it had not yet developed a typical tail, observers could see that the process was underway.

“Hubble shows that the comet has a teardrop-shaped cocoon of dust coming off its solid, icy nucleus. Because Hubble was tracking the comet moving along a hyperbolic trajectory, the stationary background stars are streaked in the exposure”, writes NASA.

Unknown origin

The comet is currently traveling through space at a speed of approximately 210,000 kilometers per hour. It will pass closer to Mars than to Earth, but at a safe distance from both planets and therefore poses no threat. Astronomers initially estimated that the icy nucleus was several kilometers in diameter, but Hubble’s observations have refined the estimate to at most 5.6 kilometers – possibly as small as 320 meters.

3I/Atlas is expected to become visible even to amateur telescopes in September, according to CBS News. It will pass closest to the sun in October, but will not be visible from Earth at that time. In early December, it is expected to reappear on the other side of the sun, enabling new observations.

Which solar system the comet originates from is still unknown. As it approaches the sun, it will melt more and release gases that telescopes can analyze – gases that may provide clues about the comet’s origin.

Women’s pelvises becoming narrower

Published 4 August 2025
– By Editorial Staff
Midwives and cesarean sections may have played a role in evolutionary change, researchers suggest.
3 minute read

Over the past century, women’s pelvises have shrunk, according to a study that examined women in three different countries. Researchers see possible explanations in evolutionary development, where increased use of midwives and cesarean sections may have played a role.

In the study, researchers examined a total of 8,866 women in Australia, Poland and Mexico between 1880 and 1980. Researchers from the University of Łódź in Poland and the University of Adelaide in Australia looked at women’s bodies and how these have changed during that time period.

During this century-long period, they found that women’s pelvises in all three countries had shrunk by an average of 4.5 centimeters. At the same time, women’s height had increased by an average of 10 centimeters. Shoulder width had not changed noticeably.

The study is still a so-called preprint, which means it has not yet been reviewed by other researchers, but it nevertheless generates great interest.

The dataset is fantastic, says researcher Lia Betti at University College London to The New Scientist.

More difficult deliveries

With narrower pelvises, vaginal deliveries can become more complicated, while it can also reduce women’s risk of pelvic floor problems after delivery. In all three countries, approximately 40 percent of all births are assisted, meaning cesarean sections, forceps or vacuum extraction are used during deliveries.

The researchers believe that a reduced pelvis may partly be an evolutionary development since pelvic width is hereditary. Previously, birth canals that were too narrow could be life-threatening for both mother and child. But today, many difficult deliveries are resolved surgically or in other ways. In this way, genetic variants are passed on that previously could have led to fatal complications for mother and child. It is also more advantageous for humans to have smaller pelvises to more easily walk on two legs, but at the same time it becomes a dilemma since humans give birth to children with very large heads compared to other species.

Researcher Philipp Mitteroecker at the University of Vienna in Austria has studied women’s pelvises in a 2024 study, which also points out that narrower pelvises for women have more advantages than just being able to walk more easily on two legs. If the pelvis is wider, the load becomes greater and the pressure on the pelvic floor increases. The risk of urinary incontinence and what is called prolapse therefore becomes greater.

The unique midwife

Mitteroecker also points to the development of midwives, that is, the unique aspect that women for hundreds of thousands of years have received help from others during delivery. This may also have contributed to weakening the natural evolutionary pressure to give women wider pelvises.

C-section is, in a way, an extreme form of that, Mitteroecker tells The New Scientist.

At the same time, Betti is skeptical that assisted deliveries and especially cesarean sections – as well as heredity and evolution – alone can explain the increasing narrowing of women’s pelvises. She points out that humans have also become significantly taller during the same period. But this increased height is probably largely due to better nutrition – not genetic changes.

When nutrition is scarce, our developing bodies tend to allocate more nutrients to certain organs, including the brain, at the expense of others. But now we have ample nutrition, so our bodies may have reallocated nutrients. So we end up with different body proportions, she says.

Researchers: Gut bacteria may protect against PFAS

Published 4 August 2025
– By Editorial Staff
2 minute read

Certain gut bacteria can absorb PFAS substances, according to new research from Cambridge University. An increase in these bacteria could contribute to better protection against the harmful effects of so-called forever chemicals.

In the study, which was published in Nature Microbiology, researchers identified a family of bacterial species that can absorb various PFAS molecules. These bacteria are naturally found in the human gut flora.

The researchers then added nine of these human bacteria to mice to “humanize” their microbiome and fed them food containing PFAS substances. They could then observe that the bacteria accumulated the chemicals, which were subsequently excreted in feces.

Furthermore, the researchers discovered that when the mice were exposed to increasing levels of PFAS, the bacteria worked harder and removed a consistent proportion of the toxic substances. Within minutes of exposure, the bacteria absorbed between 25 and 74 percent of PFAS.

“Slow poison”

PFAS are now found virtually everywhere – in everyday products, drinking water, food, and even in human blood. They are extremely difficult to break down, which has earned them the nickname “forever chemicals,” and can cause damage to both the environment and human health.

We’re all being exposed to PFAS through our water and food – these chemicals are so widespread that they’re in all of us., says researcher Dr Anna Lindell at Cambridge University, first author of the study, in a press release and continues:

PFAS were once considered safe, but it’s now clear that they’re not. It’s taken a long time for PFAS to become noticed because at low levels they’re not acutely toxic. But they’re like a slow poison.

Opens possibilities

The study’s results are promising and show for the first time that gut bacteria can help remove PFAS from the body. However, it has not yet been tested on humans, the researchers emphasize.

The goal is now to develop probiotic supplements that increase the amount of these beneficial bacteria in the gut and thereby protect against PFAS effects. The researchers point out that despite the documented health risks, very little is still being done to actively remove PFAS from the body.

The reality is that PFAS are already in the environment and in our bodies, and we need to try and mitigate their impact on our health now. We haven’t found a way to destroy PFAS, but our findings open the possibility of developing ways to get them out of our bodies where they do the most harm, says Dr Indra Roux, co-author of the study.

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