tv Tomorrow Today Deutsche Welle July 27, 2019 5:30am-6:01am CEST
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yeah that one. is the world really getting better. a global $3000.00 special reports. starts august 19th on teetotal. welcome tomorrow today the science show on t.w. coming up micro plastics harmful to our health scientists are studying fish to find out more. clicks shares and likes what makes social media so addictive. and. doctors with headsets how augmented reality is changing medicine.
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we play with it. out of it. even sit on it it's hard to imagine modern life without plastic almost 350000000 tons were produced worldwide in 28. but plastic pollution is a serious environmental problem as the lifecycle of an ordinary water bottle show. plastic bottles are made from petroleum light particle and can be found pretty much everywhere. globally every single minute of the day a 1000000 are sold. placed end to end the plastic bottle sold in 2016 would form a chain stretching all the way to the planet mercury. so you've bought a drink in a plastic bottle and finished it why. happens next in an ideal scenario it will be
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reuse some can be refilled up to 15 times if they're washed properly most are not sturdy though. many end up in a shredder where they're ground up into flakes of plastic. these can be used to make products like fleece clothing very nice except for the fact that every time the fleece is washed it releases plastic particles into the water. as for the rest of the plastic bottles they get thrown away dropped right in the street or somewhere out in nature a large number of them land in dumps or are eventually carried out to sea. between 5 and 13000000 tons of plastic garbage end up in the ocean every year a huge problem because plastics can take up to 450 years to decompose. if plastic trash doesn't get caught in propellers on ships or isn't washed up on a beach then the floating pieces grow smaller and smaller as they drift with the
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currents. algae grows on their services and that smile draws fish and sea birds they think the particles off food and swallow them when too much of it collects in their stomachs real food no longer passes through and they starve. and if those fish end up in our nets they enter our food supply directly to the rest canned off fresh seafood. is that really something we want to eat. it doesn't sound tasty from sea salt to beer tiny bits of plastic it been detected in. so far though surprisingly little is known about the impact of micro plastics on our health researchers are taking a closer look. how dangerous are micro plastics to human health. professor thomas brown back. researching
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the effect of micro plastics on different fish can the particles permeate the intestinal wall of the fish and reach other organs their digestive system is very similar to ours. we're just as interested in how fish are affected by micro plastic particles in the outside world in rivers lakes and other bodies of water in the back of our minds there's always the hope of learning something about the potential effects on humans. but on back as a fluorescent substance to the micro plastic then he feeds it to small cross stations that fish feed on micro plastics research is still in its infancy and the vast array of variables is a headache variables such as the multitude of different types of plastic. plastic up the plastic like this has different properties to a micro al plate like this. which is very firm but also totally clear totally transparent. so we can expect their plastic particles to cause different effects.
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if they. would have been that means generalisations about micro plastics were commonplace when the issue 1st arose are not really legitimate. there's a range of factors to take into account when analyzing particles their size alone varies enormously any plastic particle up to 5 millimeters in diameter is defined as a micro plastic in this case there are around 10 micro meters the surfaces of particles also very elaborate particles have smooth surfaces whereas those exposed to the elements outside are rougher but collecting particles in nature would be too time consuming and expensive. it's possible but only in really small amounts which was barely big enough for experimental purposes it might be enough for an in vitro experiment with a cell culture where you only need small amounts. but for an extended exposure of
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fish lobby you need a lot more material. over a to bring in university professor peter trips cohen is similarly wary of sweeping generalisations about micro plastics she is trying to find out how polystyrene particles affect trout grow and the larvae of non biting midges she works with $1000000.00 particles police or of water as a standard what's new is reducing the concentration to levels found in nature to only 10 particles police that's why previous research results shouldn't be extrapolated into general conclusions says professor. the problem is that when we get an effect with a 1000000 particles a liter we shouldn't start screaming that it's bad for the environment or for trout it's not environmentally relevant. because water air and soil are already full of natural particles does comparative experiments using clay problems may be caused
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more by the number of particles than the substance itself a possibility that was previously neglected. this is very dense if you get caught in a sandstorm you're also affected by tiny particles if you breathe them in they get into your lungs it doesn't have to be my plastic it could be send. us i think that will be a key issue and one where results can be relative especially with regard to high concentrations. back in pound back slab the fluorescent agent makes the micro plastics visible in the cross stations which are now fed to the fish despite many trials with a number of variables no micro plastic particles passed through the intestinal walls of a fish the experiment fails to provide evidence that micro plastics are absorbed by fish or humans. popular really bright spots on the micro particles that go straight out the back end and i've left the fish inside 5 hours. so was it all
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a false alarm well partly so far tests of only covered relatively large particles. still can't say it's safe in particular because it's also possible that nano particles form and they would probably be absorbed by tissues and we don't know what would happen after that. so one widespread suspicion is that micro plastics helped to spread pollutants this experiment shows fish larvae in water that also contains a nerve toxin and micro plastics will the micro plastics transport the toxin into the larvae the larvae begin to twitch a typical reaction to a nerve talks in. the entire body contracts because of the toxin absorbed by the micro particles. the toxins also get into the fish larvae without the micro particles except it takes a bit longer. so outside in nature it's rather unlikely that
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micro plastics are significant additional factor in pollution it's lies that. i said i see no grounds for general law. professor cohen also says people shouldn't panic she found no evidence of micro plastic damage in either her trout eggs or the non biting me. there are however initial indications of a health related impact with her german brown trout the freshly hatched fish whose eggs were exposed to micro plastic are quicker to stretch out into a swimming position although only in particle concentrations 100000 times higher than they occur in nature. there's still no evidence that micro plastics in the environment have any harmful effect on humans. made in the uk based on current knowledge i think we can relax a little but not get too comfortable. we need to focus on issues that are
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environmentally relevant as. the sheer diversity of micro plastics means we're currently in no position to make generalisations but researchers do say they know one thing that whatever the case the vast amounts of plastic waste circulating in the environment have to be reduced. classes are more environmentally friendly alternative to plastic packaging but it also has drawbacks it's heavier and it's more fragile. i'm a programmer from morocco has a question about the. why does glass shatter. let's 1st take a look at how this transparent material is made. the usual ingredients for
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commercial glass are sand so the ash lime and often recycled glass it's all crushed together and melted but well over a 1000 degrees celcius. when the molten must cools it undergoes a transformation into a tough but amorphous solid meaning it can be shaped into everything from bottles and drinking glasses to window panes. while other solids like metals may be pliable and flexible glass is hardened brittle. when it's put under too much pressure it doesn't deform it breaks. and for that reason it really survives a fall. it's. a big temperature difference. between say ice cold water and a hot glass bottle while filling a cold glass with boiling water is likewise not a great idea. unlike
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metals glass is a poor conductor of heat. so if you pour cold water into a hot glass the inside surface of the glass contracts. but the outside remains warmer creating a strain inside the material small fractures for months spread causing the glass to break. glass can also be shattered by sound when of the right frequency the sound has to be very loud and sustained over this to work. when it is the glass begins to oscillate rather like this bridge and that can result in what's called a resonance disaster amplifying the oscillation and causing the glass to break.
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the glass will also break more easily if it has a flaw such as a tiny fracture or material weakness. and if that doesn't work. there's always this option. if outlet is red white blood and you. do you have a science question send it to us there's a beauty oh text or voice mail if we answer it on the show we'll send you a little surprise as a thank you just as. you'll find us online and on twitter and facebook and we had a question for you too on facebook we asked. how much. time do you spend on your smartphone and what do you do. i don't even know what it feels like without a smartphone mr google always answers all my questions. so i think i want to
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also plenty of time online about 6 hours a day she reads messages and posts on what's on facebook look things up on google or watch his videos on you tube. is also a fan he's on facebook a lot usually until midnight. but what's behind our craving for social media. catalina and phillip a typical of the social media generation she has an instagram account to vote it to lifestyle topics here and he posts now and then and shows how much time they spend a day unless mark phones i mean 3 hours. for me or a few with me it's between 4 and 6 hours. i'm trying to cut down a bit even if i just want to check something quickly i end up spending half an hour
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on instagram or wherever i am. just in one time is one of a handful of researches in germany systematically researching the impact of online media he believes we need to improve our grasp of social media and use it constructively rather than being enslaved by it social media companies use sophisticated methods to lauren users and keep them. here are 3 examples 1st the like button facebook invented the thumbs up idea 10 years ago now all social media platforms have that inversion. such as the instagram haunt. because quite honestly. everything go like my posts get because i put a lot of work into them like so basically instagram is currency on instagram. costs next it's essential to social rewards and it's relatively clear that this
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simple thumbs up leads to increased activity in the brain's reward system the students do. something researches can see and scans are high number of light activates the same parts of the brain as eating cake or taking drugs as it happens facebook and co have plenty of insight of their own into our brains as evidenced by a leaked internal document facebook's algorithms can analyze our online activity to determine when we feel worthless insecure and anxious and that allows advertisers to pinpoint when we need a confidence boost and therefore target us more precisely. some point or something we later regretted or something we might do if we're feeling good and think hey i'll treat myself woman components of me and what that means is that emotional stimulation can often lead to irrational behavior and i might be
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more inclined to do some impulse buying. and social media companies a keen to spark an emotional response in new zealand and they can test how to do so for free for example number 2 by experimenting with fuses. and 2012 facebook conducted an experiment with 600000 users without their knowledge group they found primarily positive emotional content in the news feeds and group being primarily negative emotional content users in group a went on to themselves post more positive content while group b. wrote negative posts if there was no emotional content in their feed at all users simply logged on less. field into name companies have a vested interest in finessing their platforms so they conduct similar tests with thousands of users who have no idea they're part of an experiment. the ultimate
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goal is to keep users logged on for as long as possible in the movie. strategy that is evidently working in the case of catalina and philip. when i've been staring at my screen for ages i'm always really hurt and i know i've been on the phone too long when i see the time and say it's 1 in the morning time to call it a day with of in fact. that's example number 3 pull to refresh a function that keeps us well stuck to our screens. in our day to day lives the activities we engage in normally have a beginning and an end for when we finish them we can cross them off our list and move on to the next thing. that doesn't happen with these tech platforms and if they're on youtube prigs ample once one video ends another one starts like this next so when we're using these platforms we can theoretically just
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keep scrolling endlessly. and the more we do so the more data the companies collect on us which they can then parlay into advertising revenue and it does miss posts here to prevent that from happening and it can happen very easily i set myself a deadline that after 10 o'clock at night i put my cellphone away and either read a book or got a bad name when i'm 5 and oh yeah. if we go out for dinner then we both try not to get our phones out. so there's at least one hour of the day when we can have an actual conversation with him to come and also take the opportunity to just switch health. but don't switch off just yet another kind of digital technology is taking off augmented reality is making inroads in all sorts of places intertainment museums architecture
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and many different industries. technology overlays digital information onto the real world it's already expanding that arises of medical education and surgery. where deep in the basement of the munich university hospital a team here is working on the future of surgery but they aren't doctors this simulated surgery is being carried out by computer science students the technology they're developing could revolutionize surgery. they're using augmented reality glasses at software recognizes the surgical instruments and provides instructions. play video. voice command. scalloped information displayed in their headset such as step by step instructions on how to set up and use the various surgical instruments . back
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room and. play video. users can ask for more explanatory videos graphics and photos. the system means everyone knows precisely what they have to do where and when. surgical assistance to not only do. assist during order of operations can now also help special operations with this system. in high tech operating theatres it's not uncommon for the surgical instruments they aren't all that familiar with using augmented reality glasses that means they don't have to spend hours reading instruction manuals. you know. we request that the instruction manuals for surgical instruments be available in the operating theatre instrument then we check there then how the instruments are put together. that's not an unrealistic scenario
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it happens very often so i can imagine that this new system would make the job significantly easier business with. the team of computer scientists at munich's technical university are world leaders in the field of augmented reality applications in medicine and surgical instructions are just the beginning one day doctors might be shown a are images overlaying their patients that would allow them to see inside the body the organs nerves and tumors. the doctor can directly feel in a patient. there is a narrowing of an artery there is more it can be that if location we follow the body so way localizing intelligently correctly in visualizing it correctly in our demented reality we are hoping that we would improve the health
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care. to make that possible the software we need to integrate. data from regular x. rays cat scans or m.r.i. scans to generate a precise 3 d. image super imposed inside the patient's body. the doctor would see a 3 d. image of the bones inside the leg and use that information to for example attach an artificial knee with much greater precision. and with the previews of embarrassment that they're measuring infrastructure i think very soon you have these being used on them every day basis. such complex technical developments in the field of medicine have to be thoroughly tested before they can be used on patients so it will likely be a few more years before augmented reality is deployed and the replacement surgery but it's already being used to train medical students. at munich university hospital they're already using software developed by the team
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led by nasir nava. it's called the magic mirror and it's used in the teaching of anatomy it can generate 3 d. images it can also generate 2 d. cross sections of the body instead of learning anatomy by dissecting it could have or they can study using augmented reality. we can't do this with a human body we can't cut one into slices with this technology we can examine the topography of each organ and where in fact. the advantage of integrating magic mirror into this course is that the students can investigate their own bodies and find out exactly what each blood vessel is. in this kind of work with augmented reality also helps prepare medical students in munich for the clinical practice of the future. to
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realise. the stork to work with patients. real solutions using kid mounted display were going to do your duty photo printing room they would be ready to to use it because they are completive from the middle of. the medical students also get to work with the augmented reality surgical class since its display replaces the magic mirror each student can study the inner structures of the body even when they're working in large groups. in a new look at a couple there are often 10 or 12 of us gathered around a real corpse in a not to me class. but with small glasses we can all see each muscle full scale courses accounting. advantage a reality is set to transform medicine. anatomical models that get up and walk away are just the beginning. that's all for today
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on our next show we meet alexandra for norm book in 1799 he set off to explore central and south america the natural scientist and humanist he traveled not for conquest but to learn and he always had his plan ready to record what he found join us next week as we retrace his journey until then good bye.
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come. on. meet the artist today we speak to you she came to canada as a refugee when she was just a chance today she's a lawyer author and show host successful and full of right to lying to us she talks about how canada became her mum someone pick me up and help me in the towns everybody was going out. getting to know you doing. coming up on d w. jellyfish
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are mysterious and graceful. in real life and in our. class artist stephanie. captures their charm as we're. making their debut to. time. the romance in 30 minutes on d w. o go to the girl max new channel. the gold mine of stories. with exclusive insights. and a must see concerning parts culture kimura. pleased to be for curious minds.
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do it yourself networkers. so subscribe don't miss our. robots they're still in the development phase of physics but what's going to happen when they grow up. with humans and machines and able to peacefully co-exist. or are we on the verge of a robot collapse. if we just bumble into this totally unprepared with our heads in the sand fusing to think about what could go wrong then let's face it it's probably going to be the biggest mistake in human history. artificial intelligence is now spreading through our society. is this the beginning of a going to do teach. will we be subjected to continuous state surveillance.
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a i will experts be able to agree on technical guidelines or will this technology create deadly new autonomous muslim systems are go. play nice robot collapse starts aug 14th on d w. b s coast guard and red crescent have recovered dozens of bodies of europe found migrants who perished at sea search operations continue after up to 150 people went missing when their boats capsized in the mediterranean scores of others were rescued by the libyan coast guard. thousands of protesters gathered at hong kong airport to call for democracy and educate tourists about mass demonstrations in the city hong kong.
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