Scientists have been celebrating seventy years of continuous data collection of measurements from the ionosphere, the outer-most layer in the Earth’s atmosphere. On 11 January 1931, a sequence of ...
Techno-Science.net on MSN
🔭 Earth's mysterious invisible halo finally revealed by a space observatory
Our planet is surrounded by a halo of ultraviolet light invisible to the naked eye, a celestial phenomenon that scientists ...
As much as we should appreciate and protect the atmosphere that immediately embraces this planet, the other layers of the atmosphere are essential too and provide services we may not readily recognize ...
The South Atlantic Anomaly, a huge weak spot in the geomagnetic field off South America, has expanded and sprouted a lobe in ...
The stratosphere — the layer of Earth's atmosphere between 7.5 and 31 miles up — is shrinking due to greenhouse-gas emissions, a new study found.
The ozone layer is a part of Earth’s atmosphere that captures some of the Sun’s ultraviolet (UV) light emissions. When the ozone layer is compromised, its ability to absorb radiation weakens, allowing ...
A new climate intervention strategy aims to decrease the amount of water vapor in the stratosphere by injecting it with ice-forming nuclei. The idea is that, by reducing the water content, more heat ...
A tremendous cosmic explosion 2.4 billion light years away temporarily changed the electric field in Earth’s ionosphere (the electrically-charged upper layer of our atmosphere that helps shield life ...
The Register on MSN
Starlink is burning up one or two satellites a day in Earth’s atmosphere
Kessler syndrome is bad; atmospheric incineration may be worse, says astrophysicist Jonathan McDowell If you had to guess how many Starlink satellites burn up in Earth's atmosphere on an average day, ...
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Earth's oxygen boom: How nickel and urea in early oceans shaped microbial life and set the stage
The appearance of oxygen in Earth's atmosphere was a turning point in the history of our planet, forever transforming the ...
As the satellites orbit Earth at an altitude of around 340 miles (550 kilometers), they slowly lose altitude over time due to ...
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