Today in Science: How to cool your body down fast

June 22, 2023: Everything in the universe will evaporate, heartbeats affect perception of time and we visualize the staggering pressure at the bottom of the sea. Read it all below!
Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor
TOP STORIES

The End of All Things

Black holes emit a type of energy called Hawking radiation–the slow emission of thermal radiation as matter and antimatter particles escape from the black hole. Over time, this escaping energy depletes them, which causes them to slowly lose mass and evaporate. According to a new study, anything with gravity, meaning basically every object in the universe, will emit Hawking-like radiation and evaporate

Why this matters: The long-lived remnants of dead stars such as white dwarfs and neutron stars—which have enormous mass—might have their life shortened if the phenomenon is real. But don't worry, even if it turns out to be true, you and all your belongings will be dust before the effect kicks in.

What the experts say: The analysis seems promising, says Tyler McMaken, a Ph.D. student who studies theoretical astrophysics at the University of Colorado Boulder. "This shows that there is definitively some effect where particles can be ripped apart just solely from gravitational forces in the vacuum."

A Beat in Time

The heart's activity influences our perception of time. Two recent studies found that one's perception of time fluctuates over the course of each heartbeat: During systole (heart contracted), study volunteers perceived time duration to be shorter than it actually was. During diastole (heart relaxed), the exact opposite was true.

How it works: Pressure sensors in blood vessel walls send signals to the brain. As a result, between heartbeats the sensor activity drops, giving the brain more capacity to process incoming information. This increase in sensory impressions could make time feel longer.

What the experts say: These findings don't necessarily explain the differences in how we perceive time during specific events–say, time flying while playing with a litter of puppies, or dragging while at work (or at home during a global pandemic). The experience of time is influenced by many factors, including our emotion and attention.
GRAPHIC OF THE DAY

INCREASING OCEAN PRESSURES
Credit: Jen Christiansen, modified from "How the Ocean Sustains Complex Life," by Mark Fischetti, Kelly J. Benoit-Bird, Skye Morét and Jen Christiansen, in Scientific American; August 2022
The pressure around the famous sunken Titanic is about 375 atmospheres. That means every square inch of an object's surface experiences the equivalent of 5,500 pounds of force. As submersibles descend into the water, one of the biggest dangers is increasing water pressure as the ocean gets deeper, which the crafts are intended to withstand. The U.S. Coast Guard announced today that rubble of the missing tourist sub, Titan, had been found. They said the debris showed signs consistent with catastrophic loss of the vessel's pressure chamber.
TODAY'S NEWS
• This week we've discussed extreme heat waves and why more heat is on the way this year. What are the best ways to cool your body down fast? Senior editors Tanya Lewis and Josh Fischman discuss it on this episode of Your Health, Quickly. | 10 min listen
• Many cancer drugs (and other meds such as those for ADHD or antibiotics) are in short supply. These older but crucial generic drugs are often sold at a loss or for little profit, so manufacturers have little incentive to make them. | 9 min read
• Gas stoves pollute homes with benzene, emitting more of the known carcinogen than present in secondhand smoke, according to a new study. | 3 min read
• Donald Triplett, who was the first person to be diagnosed with autism, died last week in his hometown of Forest, Mississippi, at age 89. | 3 min read
More News
EXPERT PERSPECTIVES
•  A new way to look for life in the cosmos other than looking for "habitable zones" may be look for the "computational zones" of the universe, whether in RNA translation or in digital 1s and 0s or something else altogether, writes Caleb Scharf, senior scientist for astrobiology at NASA's Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley. | 5 min read
More Opinion
The graphic above illustrating pressure levels in the ocean was adapted from a fabulous package we published last summer on the oceans. I highly recommend you check it out! Personally, I can never see enough photos of sea angels, and there are some good ones in there. 
This newsletter is for you! Let me know how you like it AND if there are ways we can improve it. Email me directly: newsletters@sciam.com. Until tomorrow!
—Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor
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