Modelling the Sun’s influence on the Earth’s climate
Solar irradiance provides heat and light for life. It waxes and wanes with the cycle of solar activity, which currently cannot be predicted accurately. Researchers in Davos are collaborating on several space experiments to find out more about solar physics.
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A documentary and animation filmmaker from Bern, Michele studied film at Zurich University of the Arts. He's been a swissinfo.ch video journalist since 2004 and has a special interest in developing new video formats for mobile viewing, mixing animation and documentary styles.
Writes about the impact of new technologies on society: are we aware of the revolution in progress and its consequences? Hobby: free thinking. Habit: asking too many questions.
In 1904 the Prussian businessman Carl Dorno travelled to Davos with his daughter, who was suffering from tuberculosis. In those days the Alpine town was a health resort for tuberculosis patients. As an amateur meteorologist, he began to build scientific instruments with the aim of investigating how the climate influenced our health. This was the birth of the Physical Meteorological Observatory Davos (PMOD)External link.
In the early 1970s the observatory also became home to an international calibration centre for radiation measurements, the World Radiation Center (WRC). The radiometers developed there are used by weather stations all over the world, not only on the ground but also in space. For instance, two instruments are on board the Solar OrbiterExternal link, a Sun-observing satellite developed by the European Space Agency (ESA).
To make more accurate predictions about climate change, researchers in Davos need to better understand solar cycles, which last about 11 years. Why is there a lot of activity in some cycles and very little in others? Understanding these mechanisms also helps predict solar flares, which can interfere with technologies such as electricity grids, navigation and communications.
In this episode of our Science in Davos series, PMOD/WRC director Louise Harra gives us an insight into the research with the Solar Orbiter instruments.
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Bone doctors gather at the AO Davos Courses
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Sara and Michele take you to the AO Davos Courses, a two-week training congress for surgeons learning to treat bone fractures.
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The AO Foundation is a leader in research into the healing of bone fractures. We go behind the scenes to see what technologies are being developed.
Looking for allergy relief in the pollen-free Swiss Alps
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Once a haven for tuberculosis sufferers seeking treatment, today Davos has become a hub for studying a common modern-day affliction: allergies.
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.
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How Davos’s storied past is shaping the future of medicine
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The Swiss mountain town of Davos is not just the home of the WEF – it has long been a centre of cutting-edge scientific innovation.
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How does climate change affect the ecosystem in the Arctic? Follow our bloggers investigating the ecological processes behind Arctic greening.
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Swiss astrophysicist Adrian Glauser guides us through the technology in the most powerful space telescope ever deployed – the James Webb.
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If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.