September 16, 2025
4 min learn
Readers Reply to the Might 2025 Concern
Letters to the editors for the Might 2025 challenge of Scientific American
Scientific American, Might 2025
SPEEDY COMETS
“Darkish Comets,” by Robin George Andrews, describes a gaggle of objects in our photo voltaic system with “unexplained” acceleration. That made me marvel: Is it attainable that whereas darkish vitality seems uniform over galactic scales, it’s truly extra discrete at smaller scales akin to that of the photo voltaic system? And if such packets of darkish vitality had been to happen close to or on considered one of these “darkish comets,” might they be giving these uncommon our bodies the mysterious acceleration? I assume that wouldn’t actually reply something till we higher perceive darkish vitality, however it could be a spot to search for clues.
MICHAEL Okay. MARTIN VIA E-MAIL
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Andrews’s article notes that the reason for the noticed acceleration of some gadgets passing via our photo voltaic system is unclear. The article considers whether or not outgassing would possibly induce the acceleration, however no sturdy proof for this feature has been discovered. Unconsidered is one other attainable affect referring to magnetic fields.
An object that’s made up of fused metals would possibly accumulate {an electrical} cost. A charged merchandise that travels via sturdy magnetic fields, as may very well be encountered near the solar or Jupiter, may be anticipated to show acceleration with none seen emissions. Has anybody completed the calculations to see if this would possibly account for among the anomalous acceleration?
SCOTT T. MEISSNER VIA E-MAIL
ANDREWS REPLIES: Seeing as darkish vitality seems to be chargeable for accelerating the enlargement of the universe, it’s not unreasonable to wonder if it’s giving sure comets an additional velocity increase, too. However Martin is correct: we don’t actually perceive darkish vitality, so invoking it to clarify these bizarre zigzagging objects might be a useless finish—and I’m undecided darkish vitality operates on such a selected and tiny scale.
I like Meissner’s concept that these objects may be pushed by an electromagnetic drive! One challenge, although, is that of composition: extremely metallic asteroids, together with ones like Psyche (which is probably an uncovered iron core from a destroyed planet), don’t look like affected by the magnetic discipline of the solar or Jupiter on this method. So that is most likely not the reason for darkish comets.
MINING THE SEAFLOOR
I learn “Deep-Sea Mining Begins,” by Willem Marx, with anger. It appears the issue of deep-sea mining is just not solely an financial or political one; it’s also an moral and ethical one. Too many individuals suppose solely of their very own livelihood. They care about their current lives however not about Earth’s future. We should increase our society’s ethical requirements.
HIROYUKI UCHIDA TOKYO
REPTILE CALIBRATION?
“Turtle Dance,” by Jack Tamisiea [Advances], observes that loggerhead sea turtles dance after they discover meals and in addition kind lifelong recollections of Earth’s magnetic discipline particular to such feeding grounds. If a sea turtle can navigate with our planet’s magnetic discipline, it should have a magnetic sensor. It appears prone to me {that a} sea turtle’s “dance” creates the lifelong reminiscence by discovering which physique orientation maximizes the response in its magnetic sensor, much like the calibration of a magnetic fluxgate compass.
JAMES R. McGEE LAKE ELMO, MINN.
WHALE OF A PROBLEM
“Form Shift,” by Rachel Crowell and Violet Frances, presents mathematicians’ descriptions of gorgeous and intriguing types and surfaces. Amongst them, Sarah Hart of Birkbeck, College of London, discusses cycloids—curves traced out by some extent on a circle’s circumference because it rolls alongside a line—and describes an fascinating property in regards to the descent of a particle alongside a cycloid: beneath gravity, the particle “will attain the underside in the identical time regardless of the place on the curve it’s launched.”
I ponder whether Hart is conscious that in Herman Melville’s 1851 novel Moby-Dick, the character of Ishmael observes and empirically solves this very downside whereas scrubbing a big iron pot used to render oil from whale blubber: “I used to be first not directly struck by the outstanding reality, that in geometry all our bodies gliding alongside the cycloid, my soapstone for instance, will descend from any level in exactly the identical time.” Melville was an intuitive mathematician and an especially acute observer of every little thing.
“CWITHAL” VIA E-MAIL
GENDER AND OPPRESSION
In “Romantic Hopes” [Advances; June], Clarissa Brincat stories on a evaluation of previous research that means that males place extra significance on romantic relationships than ladies do as a result of they “anticipate to achieve extra.” The article quotes psychologist Mariko Visserman as noting that the paper explains “how gendered norms and experiences early in life can set the stage for the variations between males’s and girls’s relationship advantages and vulnerabilities afterward.” It isn’t shocking that early experiences arrange grownup patterns. What’s shocking is that the article by no means mentions the type of society that produces the cultural “gendered norms” from which these early experiences and relationship patterns come up: patriarchy.
As a now retired psychotherapist with a grasp of social work diploma, I’d say it’s no marvel that feminine expectations of romantic relationships are usually not very excessive. Most girls are nonetheless usually harshly judged by males who don’t imagine they’re entitled to get pleasure from the identical freedoms, together with intercourse, as males do. The gendered norms of patriarchy give rise to males who search to dominate ladies and use them as intercourse objects. Romantic relationships ought to be enjoyable and thrilling for men and women in our sociable species. However from adolescence, ladies are “hit on” in school, within the office and in public with sexual innuendo, ridicule and undesirable sexual advances. This barrage of insults and strain that approaches or, extra probably, is the cultural norm naturally disheartens many ladies from actively in search of romance. Many ladies after all nonetheless search romantic relationships, though most are understandably fairly guarded and take time to belief. Feminism has been attacked for many years, if not longer.
Your article’s omission of a point out of what appears to be the apparent determinative function of patriarchy in relationships is regarding and suggests the identical norms could also be at work covertly or overtly in your publication.
ELLIOTT LIBMAN VIA E-MAIL
ERRATUM
In “Darkish Comets,” by Robin George Andrews, a picture of the asteroid Bennu was incorrectly recognized as displaying the asteroid Ryugu.
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