- Sabine's Newsletter
- Posts
- Peak Oil, Augmented Forests, Energy from Feathers, and Weight Loss
Peak Oil, Augmented Forests, Energy from Feathers, and Weight Loss
Peak Oil, Augmented Forests, Energy from Feathers, and Weight Loss
Peak Oil is Here Again
IEA 2023 projection for global oil demand in million barrels per day
According to the International Energy Agency, we are on track to see fossil fuel use peak before 2030. In their recent World Energy Outlook, they say that clean energy supply is now sufficient for global demand for fossil fuels to falter and enter a terminal decline. While the share of coal, oil, and natural gas in the global energy supply has been stuck around 80% for decades, they say that by 2030 it’ll go down to about 73%. Then again, peak oil has been predicted several times before and it didn’t come to pass, so don’t hold your breath. Full report here.
This week's episode of Science News covers the sun's magnetic field, the moon's age, the Earth's leaky core, the tiniest particle accelerator ever, and more! You can take this quiz here.
Researchers Scan Forest with Augmented Reality
Ecologists at Rice University used augmented reality to capture and analyse what’s going on in Tanzania's tropical forests. The Microsoft HoloLens 2 headset allowed them to control environmental scanners and then digitally construct the forest and its animals in a 3D model. Their project logged 19 species in their natural habitat and revealed that larger surface areas were associated with greater species diversity. Press release here, paper here.
Check Out What’s New On Brilliant
From LLMs to black holes, there's always something new to discover. Brilliant's growing library gets you hands-on with advanced concepts in math, science, data, and CS. Every lesson is packed with interactive problems that get you hands-on with advanced concepts. Check out the full Brilliant experience today with a 30-day free trial. Plus, Sabine readers get a special 20% discount on an annual premium membership.
Green Energy from Chicken Feathers
Image Source: Soon et al., Applied Materials & Interfaces (2023)
Ever wonder what happens to the feathers that once adorned the chicken you just roasted? Most of them get burned. But researchers at ETH Zurich and Nanyang Technological University Singapore had a better idea: build hydrogen fuel cells with them. They removed keratin – the material that makes up nails, hair, and you guessed it, feathers – from the chicken down, and used it for the membrane in hydrogen fuel cells, where water and oxygen react to form water and release energy. It’s an eco-friendly and cheap solution that along the way also solves a waste problem – smart! Press release here, paper here.
In this week’s video, we collect all the facts and numbers about the miracle weight-loss drug semaglutide. How big is the weight loss, what weight do you lose, what are the side effects, and what happens when you stop taking it? We have the answers. You can take the quiz here.
Our podcast “Science with Sabine” is available on Spotify, Amazon, Apple, Castbox, Google Podcasts, Pocket Casts, and Radio Public.