Scientists reported a long-lasting space hurricane in Earth’s ionosphere and magnetosphere, near the North Pole. These findings shed more light on how space weather affects critical technology that we use daily on Earth.

Scientists reported a long-lasting space hurricane in Earth’s ionosphere and magnetosphere, near the North Pole. These findings shed more light on how space weather affects critical technology that we use daily on Earth.
Time is perhaps the most important measurement that any of us makes each day, and throughout history humans have developed many forms of measuring time. As our knowledge of the universe expands, so does our comprehension and tracking of time, from the atomic to the cosmic scale.
Science has long tried to explain what makes us conscious beings. New research suggests that to solve this mystery, we need to consider Einstein’s relativity theory and the conscious perspective at each point in spacetime.
In orbit 1.5 million km from Earth, the James Webb Space Telescope delivered its first images in July with stunning detail. Using infrared detection technology, Webb looks back in time over 13 billion years and promises to unlock mysteries hidden in the earliest light of the universe.