All posts tagged: trillions

Richard Feynman explains why our night sky is dark despite trillions of stars

Richard Feynman explains why our night sky is dark despite trillions of stars

A black patch of sky looks empty until you stop taking it for granted. That is the starting point of a theory from Professor Richard Feynman, built around what sounds like a child’s question, why the night sky is dark. The usual answer feels obvious. The sun sets, Earth rotates, and night falls. That explains why it is not daytime. It does not explain why the sky itself turns black. For centuries, astronomers and philosophers worked from a set of assumptions that seemed reasonable enough. The universe, they thought, was infinite. It had existed forever. And stars were spread through it more or less everywhere, even if they clustered in galaxies. Put those ideas together, and the darkness overhead starts to look strange. The way into the problem is visual. Picture yourself in a forest so vast it never ends. In a small forest, you can look between trunks and catch glimpses of open sky. In an infinite one, every line of sight eventually hits a tree. Shift your gaze slightly, and you miss the …

Sooner-than-expected climate impacts could cost the world trillions

Sooner-than-expected climate impacts could cost the world trillions

Wildfires in California in January 2025 David McNew/Getty Images The impacts of climate change are occurring sooner than expected, but governments and businesses continue to underestimate the risks, which could add up to trillions of dollars in economic losses by 2050. A report by climate scientists and financial experts has warned that the world may have seriously underestimated the rate of warming and faces “planetary insolvency”, where global warming begins to severely damage both the environment and economic growth. Decision-makers typically focus on the middle-ground estimates of climate impacts. But they should be preparing for the worst-case scenarios instead, the report says, since impacts like short-term precipitation extremes in some regions are happening earlier than anticipated. “Governments need to agree on a planetary solvency plan quickly,” says David King, former top climate adviser to the UK government who contributed to the report. “We are looking at an accelerated rate of temperature rise. We’re not sure if that will continue into the future but we can probably assume it’s not going to relax backwards.” A first …