Dear Hank & John - 267: One From the Archives
Episode Date: November 24, 2020How much sand can I take from the beach before it becomes immoral? Are there fossils in space? Where does a pirate accent come from? What's the big city equivalent of a corn field? How do I cut down o...n screen time? Do I keep tea warm or cool it down? Hank Green and John Green have answers!If you're in need of dubious advice, email us at hankandjohn@gmail.com.Join us for monthly livestreams and an exclusive weekly podcast at patreon.com/dearhankandjohn.Follow us on Twitter! twitter.com/dearhankandjohn
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Dear Hank and John.
Doors up for a think of a dear John and Hank.
It's a podcast where two brothers answer your questions, give me a db advice and bring
you all the week's news from both Mars and AFC, Lombard and John O's, just at the store
trying to get a Thanksgiving turkey.
And they just weren't very many of them and they were all quite small and I said, did
they get any bigger to one of the employees at the grocery store and they said to me, look straight in the eyes and
said, they said, man, no, they're dead. A story that is obviously made up because of course,
I've not spoken to anyone in the grocery store and would not do that. Nor am I getting a
Thanksgiving turkey because of how my Thanksgiving gathering will be as you might expect, very small. Yeah, same here.
We will be having a four person Thanksgiving.
We're calling it the bad Thanksgiving,
but we're calling it the bad Thanksgiving
to hopefully help make next Thanksgiving
not the worst Thanksgiving.
Yes, that's right.
And I will say this now.
So as a science guy, I'm very excited about mRNA vaccines,
very excited that they are seem to have high efficacy and will be available to some people
fairly soon. It's very exciting, very big news for a lot of different reasons.
But one of the things that this means is that it is more important than ever to
decrease the spread of this disease, which I know can feel like an insurmountable problem sometimes.
But like every person who doesn't get COVID in the next few months is a person who may never get COVID,
because the vaccines will be available. So that's the thing that we're fighting for now. Whereas
before we didn't really know what the end game was, now we do. And so now there is a very good
reason to be taking every precaution we can can because we are protecting certainly not just ourselves, but also our neighbors and all of the healthcare
workers who are working very hard right now and very difficult circumstances and need
our support.
Yeah, we received a lot of emails this week from nurses and doctors and CNAs and lots
of other people who work in hospitals who are just under extreme, extreme
stress right now.
And I'm so sorry and I don't really know what else to say.
Like we thought about what we can say and all I really know how to say is that I'm sorry
and I hope that things get better soon and I'm sorry that you are being asked to do these Hercula and tasks in really difficult
circumstances.
Anyway, it's a comedy podcast.
And we're going to answer your questions because that's what we do.
That's what we do.
That is what we do.
We have a small role to play, and we will play it. It's true.
Some people save lives with their work. Some people sit in their basement, talking to
their brother, offering dubious advice to listeners who write in with ridiculous questions.
Such as beginning with this one from Kevin who writes, dear John and Hank, how much sand can I take from the beach before it becomes immortal?
Nope, thanks, Kevin.
That's not what it says.
How much sand can I owe?
That makes way more sense.
What did you think was becoming immortal?
I was imagining that if you took enough sand away from the beach, the sand that
you've removed from the beach would become a kind of sand monster that needs to return
to the beach and then spend the rest of all time like trying to reunite with its former
self. And so I had to figure out how much sand it takes to make that immortal sand monster,
but it turns out the question is a little bit different.
The question is how much sand can I take from the beach before it becomes immoral?
Kevin.
Kevin, that's not as good of a question as your original question.
I mean, it's still a very good question.
I like it because it's not about what's legal
and not legal.
It's about the morality of the situation.
Like when am I taking from others?
Like when have I diminished this shared resource?
Yeah, which I think is a great question.
Now, sand is pretty immortal.
As far as things go, like everything has an end,
but sand's end is longer away.
It will become rock eventually, but even then it will still be pretty sandy.
Kevin, the answer to your question, and I've done some studies about this. So you can't
say that you can take no sand away from the beach because all humans take sand away
from the beach when they walk away from the beach like you said.
Yeah, I would love, I would love to take no away from the beach when they walk away from the beach. I would love to take no sand from the beach.
If there were a way to take no sand from the beach,
I would pay five dollars for that.
Yeah, so the general rule when you're interacting
with natural spaces is take nothing, leave nothing,
but in the case of a beach, it forces you to take sand.
So the question is,
I will come, I'm with you forever.
We are friends, I will be on your car now.
So the question is how much sand can you take?
Yeah, and I think the answer is the amount
that is attached to your body.
Is there, is the right amount?
After you try to remove all of the sand,
is the most sand you can take from the beach.
I think after that it does become unethical
because if everyone was taking, you know, a two liter bottle can take from the beach. I think after that it does become unethical because if everyone was taking a two liter bottle
of sand off the beach, then eventually the beach
would be less good.
Right, here's, I have a different solution
to this problem, which is you can take an amount of sand
as long as you're not going to in some way
financially benefit from the sand.
So you cannot, you can't remove sand or like in a way that's like,
well, I need sand for this. And so I'm going to instead of buying it at the store, I'm going to
take it from the beach. That's definitely immoral. Yes. But you can take an amount of sand that is like
a memento. Right. And so it's beyond just like if you want to fill a vial with sand. But like if it's
a memento, it isn't about the amount. It's about the existence of the sand.
So like having one of those water jugs
that you put on the water jug cooler,
is that what that's called at the workplace?
Not really, but I know what you mean,
those like 10 gallon jugs.
You can't fill them in the sand.
You can't, yeah, because that's not a memento.
You can fill like a test tube with sand.
Yeah, and then you're like,
this is my test tube collection of the sands
that I, of the beaches that I go to.
And here's all the different sands.
Which would actually be a very cool collection.
It's pretty cool.
And you can see that like, usually you're like,
all sands are same, but then if you go to different beaches
and you actually can compare them,
then it becomes clear that all sands are different.
Yeah, so Kevin, that's the answer.
We think you can take like a test tube worth of sand
for your own personal appreciation and enjoyment. John, I have a really important question that I need to get
to immediately. And it is, this question is now stretched through three episodes. And it's from
Beatrice who asks, dear Hank and John, but mostly Hank, on episode 265 you talked about how the
impact of the meteor that killed the dinosaurs was so big that a lot of stuff went into space
and never came down.
Does this mean that there are dinosaur fossils
in space and maybe in the future
that there will be space paleontologists,
not the muse, Beatrice.
Whoa.
This question blew my mind.
Oh my God.
So here's the thing,
and I don't know how to do the math on this,
because there's two things that could mean there are no bits of dinosaur in space,
but they might both be not true. So one is that just the process of having enough energy,
like put into you means that a piece of dinosaur would vaporize on its way to space.
And the other is that they're just like for the proportion of the earth that was hit by the asteroid,
individual dinosaurs is going to be a very small percentage. And it may be so small a percentage that it is unlikely
that any amount of dinosaur actually reached space. But it seems totally possible to me. I think the first one, the first thing,
definitely dinosaur teeth are just as hard as rocks.
And so dinosaur teeth, it seems to me.
I believe at this point, I need to,
wouldn't they get burnt up in the atmosphere?
No, like if rocks can make it, then teeth can make it.
Teeth and rocks are similar in their hardnesses.
Okay.
And so I, like I am willing to say that there is a good chance
that there are dinosaur, like at least one dinosaur
tooth in space.
So it's possible.
Would all these things be an Earth's orbit
or is it possible that some of them got hit so hard
that they were completely,
they're not even related to Earth,
they're like headed out of the solar system?
It'd be pretty hard to escape the solar system,
is my guess, they could easily escape Earth's orbit
and be an orbit around the Sun.
They would have to have, in the 65 million years,
found some sort of stable place to exist.
Those gravitationally stable places do exist.
They may have also followed on to Mars Irvina's,
which is the most likely place for them to go. Oh my God, though, how cool is that Hank? How cool is it if he goes to Mars Irvina's, which is the most likely place for them to go. Oh my God, though.
How cool is that, Hank?
How cool is it if we go to Mars?
And we find it dinosaur tooth.
We're walking around Mars looking for signs of life and we find a tooth and we're like,
we did it.
We found, but no, we didn't do it.
It turns out that that dinosaur tooth just made the journey.
It made it.
Oh my God.
That's mind blowing.
I love it.
This must be how you feel when you read science fiction.
I love it.
That's so thrilling to consider.
It's so thrilling to consider the idea
that like floating around Earth more and more likely
the sun could be dinosaur fossils.
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah, little like, well well, not even fossils.
Because, like, if they went into space,
like, if there was actual flesh that went into space,
it would just be mummified.
Oh, you're telling me.
I think about that all the time.
You don't have to tell me what happens to flesh
when it goes to space.
That's one of my, like, top 20 apocalyptic worries.
Uh, well, we've got, we can talk about it more
if you want, because we have another question
in which flesh may end up in space.
Oh, I'd rather not.
No, I'd rather not.
I, you know, one of the many things that we completely take for granted as humans is
the atmosphere.
What an atmosphere.
No, it's great.
No, it's great.
I have read so many posts on Reddit and Facebook and Twitter over the last like three weeks trying to understand the incredibly
weird times in which I find myself. And not one time have I read a single piece of media
that paused to acknowledge that if it were not for the atmosphere, we couldn't be having
any of these incredibly stupid conversations. All hail the atmosphere. No gods, no kings, only the atmosphere.
Only the thin, thin shell of gas. It's like easier to get out of in terms of direction than driving to Seattle.
I mean, Seattle is further away than space, John.
Well, I think it depends on where you are.
Actually, if you're in Seattle, it's not for you.
And also, it's significantly easier to drive sideways than it is to drive up.
It's true.
Really hard to drive up.
My car has never, never done that.
This next question comes from Kat, who writes,
Dear John and Hank, is the stereotypical pirate accent
based on a real accent? And if so, from when and where,
by the way, if it sounds like we're asking a lot of silly questions,
it's because we're just, we are. And also, the minute I read this question,
I realized that I have never considered the answer. And I am completely fascinated
to learn about it. Yeah. When and where does the pirate accent come from?
The curiosity is killing me cat.
Oh, that's funny.
Oh, nicely done.
It's such a strange thing because we all know the pirate accent, but we all also know
if we like search deep in our souls that this isn't how pirates talked, right?
Yeah.
Like we know this is made up and it turns out it was made up by a man whose name was Robert Newton
who played Long John Silver
and a 1950s Disney movie called Treasure Island.
Wow, really?
Yeah. Wow.
Yeah, he made it up.
He based it on the West country and Southwest England,
which is where he lived.
And it was also where Long John Silver was from in the book,
but not where pirates were from in real life.
Who were from all over the place,
but English pirates were mostly from London.
So it would have talked like Londoners,
probably like, I don't know.
There's a lot of different London accents.
So I don't know, maybe a bunch of different London accents.
That is fascinating.
And so all of the like R, that's only like 50 years old. Yeah or 70 years old. Yeah, for getting that we are not actually that close to the year 2000
Yeah, because in my heart it'll always be about 2003. Yes, I have this problem all the time and we'll never stop having it
But accents are so cool and we're often asked like when did the American English and British English diverge?
And so like when did we stop speaking like British people?
Is sort of the, I guess the sort of root of that question?
But that's not how it works because British people continued to also change the way that they spoke.
And so it's not like the people in the 1700s in America spoke the current British accent.
They spoke the British accent that was around then,
but since then both of those accents have diverged
from that common ancestor.
Yes, so it's much less like we descended from chimpanzees
and much more like chimpanzees and us both have a common ancestor.
Exactly, yeah.
I will say that the flat American accent
that you and I not to brag are both absolute masters of.
Yeah.
And what I choose to be, sometimes I wanna be
a little bit British, maybe go a little bit Wisconsin
for a year for some reason.
I guess I could handle you going a little Wisconsin
for a year, much more than I could handle you
bringing back your fake British accent,
which just the thought of it makes like,
it's so, no, yeah, it's terrible.
I just broke out into a fever.
I, is it?
I'm sweating.
Okay, which is more embarrassing?
Yeah.
Okay, here are my two most embarrassing things
I think about a lot.
Okay.
One, my year of fake British accent, nice.
Oh, for no reason.
Oh my god.
Which is so uncomfortable.
It is a sweaty moment.
Two, I got invited to give a fancy speech at a fancy event
with lots of influential people in the audience.
And I decided to get up on stage
and instead of wearing my lanyard, like a normal human,
I thought I would be, I don't know, innovative,
but really just quirky.
And so I wore the lanyard around my neck
and then with my arm through it, like it was a purse.
But it was way too tight.
And so it was like bunching up on my chest.
Well, the answer to your question
is that while that second mortification is much more recent,
and so it feels profound,
the greater mortification by far is faking a British accent
for a yeeeer.
I disagree because I did that second thing
when I was 35 years old.
Oh, yeah.
I was just replaying my mortifications last night.
It's something that my brain loves to do
in lieu of sleep.
I actually wrote an Anthropocene review
at episode about this.
And I was able to pull one out of the archives.
You know, like sometimes you think that they're gone.
Yeah.
And then you just like, it's almost like you're flipping
through your record collection and you're like,
oh, yeah, I forgot that I have that album
by John Coltrane.
It was like, oh, god, yeah, no, how could I have forgotten
that?
Uh-huh.
Are you gonna tell me?
No.
It's not bad.
Yeah.
I've got one that I've never told anyone.
Oh, I mean, based on the modifications you're willing to share, the ones that you aren't
willing to share must be truly epic.
Pretty bad.
Because I have a much like, yeah, I actually, I'll tell it.
I'll tell it.
Okay.
Oh, God, it's so embarrassing.
So I made this video that got like 12 million views and it was the most viewed video
about the conflict in Ukraine at the time, the conflict between eastern and western Ukraine,
which becomes relevant. And the video was really good and all the facts in it were so,
so totally reliable except that every time I said eastern Ukraine, I met western Ukraine and every
time I said western Ukraine, I met eastern Ukraine, which is especially to people living in those regions is a fairly large
error. Yeah. Yeah. But like, that's just like, I can't, I still struggle with this because in my mind,
things that are in the east are over-tored, my half of the country, and things that are in the east are over toward my half of the country and things that are
in the west are over toward your half of the country.
Yeah.
And so, for example, I believe in my heart of hearts that Great Britain is in eastern
most Europe on account of how it is to the east of me.
Oh, I understand that to other people, Great Britain is in western Europe.
But the rest of Europe is more east from you.
Well, sure, Hank, if you're an extremely sophisticated
analyzer of east and west, but I'm not.
That's the whole problem, right?
So when I think about like, where is eastern Ukraine?
Oh my God.
It's the part of Ukraine closest to me
because I'm on the east.
Oh, okay. Hangs on the west. I'm on the east. Hangs on the west.
I'm on the east.
I see where you're thinking.
So this part of Ukraine has to be eastern Ukraine because it's closer to me than it is
to Hank.
Oh my God.
Okay.
And now I understand how you made that mistake.
And also the thing is it's not that big of a detail to know if you're just trying to
like understand the conflict. Yeah, but it's kind of a just a detail to know if you're just trying to like understand the conflict.
Yeah, but it's kind of a just a detail, but if you're there, it's like, stop, stop now.
It's like when, and this happens to me all the time, when people say to me, how long have
you lived in Minneapolis?
And I say, I live in Indianapolis.
And then there's a pause because they are genuinely learning that those two places are different.
Yeah, yeah, I also often get this with Missouri
because Missouri sound very similar
and so they just sort of like put me
in Missouri in their heads.
Yeah, but like they don't care.
I don't know, they don't have a picture
of what either of those places look like.
No, they don't, they're just,
they're trying to be polite.
Yeah, but they're like actual coastal liberal elites.
Yeah, which and it shows, you know, we would be if we were on the coast.
It's true. It's true.
But as it is, I have an extremely sophisticated understanding of what it's like to live in the
middle of the country.
For instance, I know that Mizzula is to the west of Indianapolis.
And, relatedly, John, we have a question from Maya who asks, dear Hank and John, I grew up in Nebraska
where there is very notably a lot of corn.
Now that I have moved away, I find myself missing
the rustle of corn stalks in the wind,
the quiet commotion of harvest,
and the expansive corn fields on the horizon.
What's the big city equivalent of a corn field? Ha ha ha be amazing, Maya. Yeah, so every big city
pretty much in the United States has a large cemetery. Oh, that was the first thing that came to mind
for me. Yeah. And I'm just like the closest thing I can get to walking through or you don't really
walk through a cornfield. You sort of walk next to a cornfield usually.
Maybe a public park,
like maybe is Central Park New York's version of cornfields?
I don't know.
Ah, well, here's the thing.
I think that the people from a distance are my corn.
And by which I mean, the sounds of the city
when you're not right up on it.
Yeah.
And so that might be from like 24's up or even like five four's up.
And it might be like from a ways away, horizontally as well.
But that's, I love the noise of a city as long as I'm not too close to it.
And I love the noise of a highway and roads like the, you know, that,
that the big semi trucks when their engine breaks as long as they're like not up in my head.
And I used to live on the highway
and the train tracks here in Mizzoula.
And initially that noise was very disruptive to me,
but it took like five days before it wasn't bothering me
anymore and then a few weeks before I was like,
I love this noise.
Yeah, that's the thing.
Like you start to associate, like when we lived in New York,
we associated the sounds of the city,
except for the sounds of the pigeons who lived on top of our air conditioning unit, engaging in fighting and or mating behavior, other than that particular set of sounds. The sounds of the
city began to feel comforting because I felt like, oh, I'm not alone. And I felt like, oh, there's lots of people out and about.
And I can go outside and join the great human fray.
And that felt kind of like good.
So much so that when we first moved to Indianapolis,
I remember the first night that we slept in our first home,
I was completely freaked out by how silent it was.
And how can you be sure that it's safe if it's so quiet
because I had begun to associate feeling safe with hearing people's voices and hearing
stuff happen outside.
Yeah.
So I think what will actually happen is that slowly the sounds of the city will replace
the sounds of cornfields.
And then when you go back to Nebraska, you're going to have your like children of the corn
moment where you're like, oh, these are some weird sounds.
It's not good. I think actually, in my experience,
you go back to a place and those tiny details
that you didn't even really notice,
like they become the trigger that brings that place back for you.
And so I think that there is no equivalent
to the quiet commotion of harvest in the city
and there will never be.
And so that is part of what makes spaces
and places different from one another.
By the way, that is a great phrase.
I had loved it.
I had commotion.
Yeah.
This next question comes from Peyton
who asks, dear Hank and John,
every Sunday morning I get a dreaded notification,
my weekly screen time report.
Oh, boy.
It was always so high.
And I don't know how to just stop.
I need my phone for emergencies, obviously,
but also for part of my job.
So I can't just turn it off.
When my phone dings and I see that dreaded
two-digit daily average, it makes me want to throw my phone
into the grand canyon help.
Always taking a bite of the forbidden apple.
Pay, TM, trademark.
Ah-ha, Peyton.
That's a good one, Peyton.
My goal has always been to keep my phone screen time T.M. trademark. Peyton. That's a good one Peyton.
My goal has always been to keep my phone screen time below an hour a day on average.
What?
Yeah.
Well, you have to remember I don't have my email on my phone.
Oh, man, John, I don't want to tell you that that's still really low.
No, it is not because I spend five or 10 hours a day on my computer.
So what is your daily screen time?
If I count the computer, it's over 10 hours.
Well, yeah, of course, but I mean, that's where I work.
If more so, I tell myself, I mean, I'm not totally.
It's also where I do a lot of other things.
Yeah, that's all you're doing.
100%.
It's also where I do a lot of my patented preventative worry
where I believe that if I just read enough about what would happen
if the atmosphere suddenly disappeared,
that will keep the atmosphere holding together.
What is your daily screen time on your phone?
You can look at it right now.
I have no idea.
Just what I do it.
Go to settings.
My average is five hours and 51 minutes,
but I still think that that's,
I'm still thinking that that's low.
That's not low, Hank, that like if,
if 10 years ago, I had told you that you would spend
six hours a day on your cell phone.
You wouldn't have said like, oh, that seems low.
You would have said like, what did they invent
to make me so addicted to it?
And the answer is TikTok.
I had a day, whoa, did I really?
I had a day last week that was 10 hours.
Oh my God.
I think I was watching a lot of TV on my phone that day.
But yeah, Peyton, the thing that you highlight here
is the thing that's so challenging,
which is that we cannot simply say,
like, I don't want this anymore
because I need a lot of things on my phone.
I need Google Maps, I need lots of other apps.
And so how do you get the stuff that's useful and not get the stuff that you are vulnerable to?
Not get the stuff that sucks you in and hijacks your consciousness and uses your attention
to turn it into a monetizable asset.
Yeah, I think it's also, like, I don't want us to treat screen time like calories, where we have decided
that this thing is bad, and so we must be ashamed of all of the ones that we consume.
Right.
To treat calories.
Where we also shouldn't treat calories like calories.
Yes.
Exactly.
Calories are food, and without them, you would die.
Yeah.
And so, primarily primarily they are helpful.
And I think that like in many cases screen time is helpful.
We shouldn't be looking at screen time as one thing.
And we need to recognize when are the times
when this is making both like me and also my world worse,
which I think a plenty of the time that I spend on Twitter is that.
But there's also the time when we're like that's making life better for me and for other people
that I'm spending time on my phone.
And I'm trying to focus more on those things.
It's really hard though.
It's really hard because nothing gets my brain worked up
quite like the opportunity to check.
And that's what Twitter and Reddit and Facebook
are really, really good at is getting you to check. And that's what Twitter and Reddit and Facebook are really, really good at is getting
you to check and then offering you rewards based on the random number of times checked. So,
I'm not saying I'm immune to it. I'm saying that I'm like deeply, deeply troubled by it. And
I'm not trying to be critical of Twitter or Facebook. I'm only trying to be critical of my use
of Twitter and Facebook, which like disturbed me. Yeah. I become a person, even on sports Twitter, like I become a person
that I'm just not proud of. I don't know how it's to say it. Yeah, I, it's funny because
I like, I know, I know that and then I think, okay, I just need to do more tweets that I'm
proud of and then I do it for two days and then I'm like, well, I see a really good opportunity
for a tweet that I feel like it's gonna be so good. I'm not
gonna be proud of it, but it's gonna be so good. And then I tweet it. And then, and then
I just like fall back into well, and also those are the ones that get all the likes and
the retweets. Like those are the ones that get the most.
Yeah. Some, I mean, that's not always like actually most of the ones that of my tweets
that get most of the likes are just funny jokes. Like that. And that's what I should be focused on because I think that's what Twitter's
actually good for.
I would just I just want to state for the record that I don't agree with the funny.
I believe I think that they're jokes.
You can't call your own jokes funny.
I guess it reminds me that today's podcast is brought to you by Hank's funny jokes.
Hank's funny jokes retweeted since 2008, not because they're funny though, just because
they jokes.
The podcast is also brought to you by Eastern Ukraine.
Oh, God.
Eastern Ukraine.
It's on the west side of Ukraine, if you're in John's brain.
And today's podcast is brought to you by the quiet commotion of harvesting corn, the
quiet commotion of harvesting corn, the quiet commotion of harvesting corn.
It's what I what the anthropocene reviewed to sound like all the time.
That's nice.
Spotgast is also brought to you by space paleontologists roving the solar system in search
of dinosaur teeth that were blasted off the planet by asteroids.
All right, Hank, before we get to the all important news from bars and AFC,
Wimuldin, I want to ask this question from B who writes,
dear John and Hank, when I cradle my mug of hot tea, am I keeping it warm?
Or am I cooling it down faster by absorbing its heat?
Thanks for your help, B.
Uh, well, I mean, it doesn't matter because you're,
because like you're not trying to keep it warm.
That's not your goal and cradling your mug.
Your goal is to warm up your hand.
You're trying to get yourself warm.
Yeah.
And it's very effective at that.
So it is you are becoming warmer
and the tea is becoming cooler.
Yes.
But as I understand it, that's the whole idea.
That's the point.
That's why we have hot tea.
Yeah.
Uh-huh. The same thing happens when you put it inside of you. It is warming you up,'s why we have hot tea. Yeah. Uh-huh. You when you the same thing happens
when you put it inside of you. It is warming you up, but it is cooling the tea down. Yeah. That's
very, very well drawn. Hank, thank you for that, that image. I was reading something recently that
said that the human body is essentially a tube. Yeah. Yeah. And that all the organs and everything are just sort of like
built around the essential tube structure of ourselves.
And then I was thinking about it more,
and I was like, I'm just like an ambulatory worm.
Yeah, we're like bony worms.
Like deep down, I'm basically a large earthworm that like believes itself to have free will.
Well, I mean, yes, there's more to it than that. I think the important thing to also recognize is
that once you start to see it this way, which is, I think, the more correct way to see it, that
what we think of as inside our bodies isn't always inside our bodies, that the digestive system
actually is a tube of outside that runs through our inside.
Yes.
Food doesn't always go in.
It doesn't really go into us.
It mostly goes through us.
Some of it goes into us, like the nutrients get absorbed, but like the, yeah, a lot of it
just goes all the way through. Yeah, it's kind of mind blowing. Really, the skin is one kind of
outside. I'm going to mess this up like I messed up Western and Eastern Ukraine. I can't tell
inside from outside either. We got to move on to the news from AFC Wimbledon. Okay. What's the news
from AFC Wimbledon? Mr. Worm. Well, there is no news from me. I've seen Wembleton Hank because of COVID.
Oh, I have seen Wembleton reported that some players got COVID.
And as a result, their games were canceled.
Their first round FA Cup match against Barrow was postponed, as was one other game.
They are all like self isolating for 14 days. And then
after everybody tests negative or the people who tested positive are negative, whenever
the regulations say they can come back to training, they will come back to training. But for
now, everything is on hold because of the pandemic. And I mean, that isn't the biggest problem with the pandemic.
So I don't even feel like I can complain or lament.
Yeah.
But that's where we are.
Well, that is frustrating.
Is there a timeline?
Yeah. So I mean, the next scheduled game is supposed to be on the 21st
and that will be after the two-week quarantine period.
It's just not clear
right now, you know, like if people may be got it in the interim, we just don't know.
So hopefully they will play this weekend, but we'll see.
Do you want to know some Mars news, John?
Yes. Desperately. Take me off of this planet.
Well, let's talk about atmospheres and how important they are because scientists are still
learning more and trying to learn more about how water keeps on escaping the red planet.
We want to know very badly where all that water went because we know it used to be there.
But how do you go from having lakes and oceans and rivers to just not anymore?
That seems like an pressing question to ask because if it happened on Earth, that'd be
really bad. And so there are two main mechanisms that we see for how water is getting lifted
up high enough in the atmosphere that it can be broken by cosmic radiation into hydrogen
and oxygen, which can then be much more easily pushed off of the planet by solar winds.
And the first thing is seasons. And water is particularly high in the atmosphere,
and the southern hemisphere during the summer,
so that accumulation is probably because of heating,
which kicks the dust up from the surface,
and the dust as it gets kicked up,
drags the water with it,
and a couple of that with a warmer atmosphere
that can hold more water,
and you get more water traveling to the upper atmosphere,
where it can then escape.
And then the second one is dust storms,
which seems to be really important.
Now in 2018, there was a huge dust storm
and you will remember this
because it was the thing that ended the opportunity
of his mission and that was bad.
So that dust storm was bad for that reason,
but it was good because it allowed us to study
how dust storms are impacting the water in the
atmosphere of Mars. Usually water abundance in the Umar atmosphere is like three parts per million,
but in the two days before the 2018 storm, that number doubled. And it's the peak of the summer,
which had the combined effect of the storm and the seasons, the total water was 60 parts per
million, 20 times the normal amount. Wow. So it seems like dust storms and the seasons, the total water was 60 parts per million, 20 times the normal amount.
Wow. So it seems like dust storms and the seasons when they go inside with each other are an even
bigger system to bring water to the part of the atmosphere where it can be removed from the
planet permanently. And that has been happening for an awful long time, billions of years, and that
is how we ended up with the Mars with no water. So we think no surface water, right?
No surface water right now,
unless you include the potential of surface water
that's just very, very briny and short-lived.
So if we imagine a very distant future
where humans are on Mars and are working to terraform it,
part of that I guess would be trying to figure out
how to reverse some of those
processes or at least limit the amount of water lost through them.
Well, I mean, so probably not, maybe in the long, long term, but the amount of loss per year
is really, is quite low. Like, if you're talking about us being able to change the look and feel
of Mars, we'd be contributing so much new water to the planet that the loss to space
would be pretty insignificant.
But the main thing that we'd wanna do is to not have
the solar wind interact with Mars as significantly,
and that's important, less for keeping water on the planet
and more for having people on the planet
because that solar wind, like the radiation from the sun
can be really damaging to life, including our life.
And there are a couple of ideas for how to do that.
Like the main one is like individual shelters,
but the big one is that there would be some kind of thing
in space that deflects the solar wind around Mars.
That thing would have to be very big and very powerful
because we can't like jumpstart the core again
and have a magnetic field
the way Earth does.
Right.
But we might be able to do something like that that would deflect solar radiation away
from the planet and without deflecting the light.
All that just reminds me of how incredible Earth is.
It's so good.
Like what a planet.
Such a great planet.
What a planet.
Oh my god.
We get so lucky.
Yeah.
Oh man. Thank you, atmosphere. You're just doing it. You're great. What a point. Oh my god, we get so lucky. Yeah. Oh man.
Thank you, atmosphere.
You're just doing it.
You're great.
It's wonderful.
Magnetic field, you rock.
Just keep doing that.
I know which way North is.
East West, a little confusing, but North, very clear.
Thank you so much for potting with me.
It is a pleasure as always.
And thanks to everybody for writing in with your questions.
You can always email us at hinkandjohnatgmail.com.
This podcast is edited by Joseph Tuneham Eddish. It's produced by Rosiana
Halstera Awesome, Sheridan Gibson. Our communications coordinator is Julia Blume.
Our editorial assistant is Debuki Trucker Vardy. The music you're hearing now,
and at the beginning of the podcast, it's by the great Gunnarola, and as they say in our hometown.
Don't forget to be awesome.
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