4.2 • 639 Ratings
🗓️ 16 May 2025
⏱️ 25 minutes
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0:00.0 | Understanding the human body is a team effort. That's where the Yachtel group comes in. |
0:05.8 | Researchers at Yachtolt have been delving into the secrets of probiotics for 90 years. |
0:11.0 | Yachtold also partners with nature portfolio to advance gut microbiome science through the global grants for gut health, an investigator-led research program. |
0:20.1 | To learn more about Yachtolt, visit yawcult.co.com.j, that's Y-A-K-U-L-T-C-O-J-P. |
0:28.4 | When it comes to a guide for your gut, count on Yacult. |
0:46.1 | Thank you. For Scientific American Science Quickly, I'm Rachel Feldman. |
0:58.2 | You don't have to pay much attention to the news to know that climate change is causing Arctic sea ice to melt and understand that this is a huge problem. |
1:03.2 | Ice reflects sunlight, which helps keep cold places cold. |
1:07.4 | Warmer weather means less ice, but less ice means more heat from the sun, which means it gets warmer, which means there's less ice, and the sea level keeps rising and rising. |
1:17.6 | It would be great if we could cut this problem off at the source by dropping our greenhouse gas emissions, but we're not exactly making great progress on that front. |
1:25.6 | In the meantime, what if we could just make more ice? |
1:31.0 | It might sound silly, but some folks in the polar geoengineering space |
1:34.6 | are making a very serious attempt to do just that. |
1:38.5 | To get the inside scoop, I'm handing the reins over to Pulitzer Center Ocean Reporting Fellow, |
1:43.1 | Alec Loon. |
1:44.5 | He's the author of a feature on the subject in Scientific Americans June issue, and today he's |
1:49.2 | going to take us along on a trip to the Arctic. |
1:56.7 | I'm snowmobiling out onto the sea ice from the Inuit village of Cambridge Bay in Canada's |
2:02.2 | Arctic archipelago. |
2:05.1 | It's negative 26 degrees Celsius. |
2:08.2 | That's negative 15 degrees in Fahrenheit. |
2:11.4 | The blasting wind makes it feel far colder. |
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