In short: more carbon in the air does not guarantee more carbon in the wood. Between those two lies a living network of ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Planet-eating stars offer a chilling clue to Earth’s far future
Far from our solar system, astronomers have finally watched a star consume one of its own planets, catching in real time a ...
TRAPPIST-1e, an Earth-sized world in the system’s habitable zone, is drawing scientific attention as researchers hunt for ...
Pluribus imagines Kepler-22b as an ocean world that sends a gift to humanity through radio waves. In real life, no such ...
Space.com on MSN
Planet-eating stars hint at Earth's ultimate fate
Our sun is about halfway through its life, which means Earth is as well. After a star exhausts its hydrogen nuclear fuel, its ...
Earth is taking in more energy than it releases back to space—a growing "energy imbalance" that is fueling global warming. A ...
The exoplanet, dubbed PSR J2322-2650 b, has a helium-and-carbon atmosphere, something researchers say they've never seen ...
Live Science on MSN
Earth's seasons vary wildly, even at the same latitude, new research finds
Earth's seasons look very different at locations not far from each other, 20 years' worth of satellite data reveals. Earth's seasonal cycles can vary dramatically across short distances, even at the ...
Researchers developed a plant based plastic that stays strong during use but dissolves safely in seawater, leaving no ...
Pluribus Episode 8 reveals the hive mind’s master plan, and it may have started long before the signal from Kepler-22b.
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
How to Keep Time on Mars: Clocks on the Red Planet Would Tick a Bit Differently Than Those on Earth
On average, Martian time ticks roughly 477 millionths of a second faster than terrestrial clocks per Earth day. But the Red ...
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