As much as 45 oceans’ worth of hydrogen may be in Earth’s core, scientists reported, suggesting most of Earth’s water was acquired during the planet’s formation.
Microbes move across the planet, linking ecosystems and spreading genes that shape antibiotic resistance, health, and ...
An experiment to quantify the amount of the universe’s lightest element in Earth’s core suggests that the planet’s water has mostly been here since the beginning ...
Discover how high-speed wavefront sensing enhances space situational awareness by overcoming atmospheric distortion.
Michael McElroy, a pioneering atmospheric scientist and Harvard University professor, was a leading expert in atmospheric ...
Harvard University researcher Michael McElroy made groundbreaking contributions to climate science and helped shape global ...
The unveiling by IBM of two new quantum supercomputers and Denmark's plans to develop "the world's most powerful commercial ...
In the 21st century, borders are no longer defined primarily by lines on a map. Instead, they are increasingly shaped by what lies beneath the soil. Oil and rare earth minerals have become the new ...
The planet's radius from pole to center has been revised to 66,842 km, and at the equator to 71,488 km. That makes it about 12 km smaller along the poles, and about 4 km smaller at the equator, than ...
The "beast" on Google Maps — called Leviathan, dragon, snake and more by some — is actually just a byproduct of the tectonic plates beneath our feet.
A team of geologists found for the first time evidence linking regions of low seismic velocity and the shape of the Earth’s magnetic field.
New research data using NASA’s Juno spacecraft shows Jupiter is slightly smaller and flatter than decades-old estimates.
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