News

While the shortest day of the year typically falls in winter, summer will have its fair share of abnormally short days this year. According to TimeandDate, Earth will spin unusually fast in July and ...
A picture snapped from the International Space Station (ISS) by NASA astronaut Nichole Ayers has captured a lesser-seen view ...
NASA Astronaut Nichole Ayers is sharing an incredible photo of a "sprite" she took from space while orbiting above the United ...
An astronaut aboard the International Space Station has shared a striking photo of what is known as a Transient Luminous ...
Earth’s rotational speed is changing, and we’re more than partly responsible. A gigantic dam, our extraction of groundwater, melting ice sheets and rising sea levels are among the human-linked ...
Once you find one of the Earth, Air, or Water Sprites in Fortnite Chapter 6, just interact with the peaceful critter to pick it up. Doing so will allow you to access a couple of features with the ...
Where to find Earth Sprites in Fortnite Earth Sprites are proving difficult to find, so far since the season has started we've found that they've only been visible in replay footage rather than ...
Climate change is both accelerating and slowing Earth's rotation by melting polar ice, which speeds up the spin, while redistributing water towards the equator, thickening Earth's waistline and ...
But here's something odd. Back in 2005, the same year that the north-south spin axis of the Earth abruptly turned left and accelerated, the Chandler wobble changed phase.
Both by melting the polar ice caps and by pumping huge volumes of water from underground, we are changing the shape, tilt, and spin of Earth. Since the early 1990s, the effect has been astounding ...
Scientists first had a hunch that the inner core was moving in the 1990s, he said. It has taken years to back up that theory with hard evidence, mainly because of the difficulty of studying a mass ...
Melting ice is slowing Earth's spin and causing changes to its axis, new studies find. The shifts are causing feedback beneath the surface, impacting the planet's molten core.