2025-05-16
25 分钟Hey listeners, Rachel here.
It's been a year since I started hosting Science Quickly,
and because of that, I have a quick favor to ask.
We would love to get your feedback on how Science Quickly has been doing and how you might like to see us evolve.
That's why we're putting out a listener survey.
If you complete it this month, you'll be eligible to win some awesome Scientific American swag.
You can find the survey at sciencequickly.com slash survey,
or we'll also have that link in our show notes.
It would mean a lot to us if you took a few minutes to complete the survey.
We promise it won't take too much of your time.
Again, you can find the survey at sciencequickly.com slash survey.
Thanks in advance for letting us know your thoughts.
For Scientific American Science Quickly, I'm Rachel Feldman.
You don't have to pay much attention to the news to know that climate change is causing Arctic sea ice to melt,
and to understand that this is a huge problem.
Ice reflects sunlight, which helps keep cold places cold.
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.
It would be great
if we could cut this problem off at the source by dropping our greenhouse gas emissions,