Solar material is gusting out of the dark patch in the Sun's corona towards Earth at more than a million miles per hour.
This layer of the atmosphere is notoriously difficult to study, but new research sheds light on its mysterious processes.
Although they don't impact the surface directly, historical evidence and simulations suggest airbursts can pack a punch.
The dataset, which covers the period from September 2004 to December 2023, includes atmospheric data from multiple layers, from ground level to about 110 kilometers above Earth’s surface.
the satellite can derive critical physical parameters of the atmospheric layers. According to GalaxySpace, the satellite is equipped with three payloads capable of simultaneously capturing ...
Flights landing Saturday night at Denver International Airport unwittingly helped trigger the formation of ice crystals in a ...
The climate has changed in the past, long before humans, so how do scientists know our recent warming is caused by man?
Snow, sleet, freezing rain—what’s the difference? ️ Here's how winter precipitation forms and what to watch for.
An Arctic cold front will bring another shot of cold air to South Texas next week. Unlike the last front, we'll also see the ...
In a paper published in Earth and Planetary Physics, a team of scientists from China investigate impacts of mesoscale gravity ...
Iggor Cavalera (ex-Sepultura, Petbrick, etc.) and Shane Embury (Napalm Death, Dark Sky Burial, etc.) have joined forces to ...