The temperature of the Earth will be warmer or cold in the future?

So far, more and more scientists supporting Earth theory will warm up due to the effects of climate change, causing sea levels to skyrocket because of ice melting in the Arctic Ocean.

According to research by Belgian scientists, in the next 30 years, many coastal countries may be submerged when rising sea levels are related to melting of ice from the Earth's terminals.

However, Russian and Japanese scientists argue that the warming process will be short-lived and in the future, people will have to endure a colder climate.

Head of the Environmental Geological Science Laboratory of the Moscow Institute of International Relations (MGIMO) Natalia Ryazanova affirmed that the transition time is not a warm climate but will be cold globally.

Picture 1 of The temperature of the Earth will be warmer or cold in the future?
Melted ice spoiled hundreds of small ships in Belgrade's Danube.(Source: THX / VNA)

The area of ​​the world's oceans will increase, causing steam to increase, so in some areas, clouds also increase the Sun's cover. After a short period of warming, this phenomenon will cause the Earth to start colder.

Now the scientific community is arguing with each other that this phenomenon will happen quickly or slowly. Russian scientists have released evidence of recent archaeological findings in the country "frozen mammoths with green grass on teeth" , demonstrating the last cold climate phenomenon on Earth happens very suddenly.

In this regard, Russian scientists are studying a special mechanism to help rats tolerate cold.

In fact, rodents can easily withstand the cold below -50 degrees C. The deputy director of the Institute of Ecology and Evolution at the Russian Academy of Sciences Alexei Surkov said that when the weather is cold, mice will fall. into short-term hibernation.

When sleeping, the rat's body temperature dropped to almost half, while for humans, the body temperature only decreased by about 5 degrees Celsius, which is significant.

According to Alexei Surkov, there is a special substance that helps mice live through the cold. There are enzymes produced by animals when temperatures drop and these enzymes allow hamsters to adapt to the cold.

Now scientists are searching for enzymes that generate enzymes and the mechanism that triggers this process. In the future, that will help create a safe anesthetic that can protect people from extreme cold weather.