NASA is sending a spacecraft to investigate the ‘bubble’ that protects our solar system0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology, Space
- June 5, 2018
You map, IMAP, we all map.
You map, IMAP, we all map.
When the solar wind – which is really a driving rain of charged particles from the sun – strikes Earth’s protective magnetic field, the shock generates roiling, turbulent magnetic fields that enshroud the planet and stretch for hundreds of thousands of miles.
New evidence of water pockets has been found hundreds of kilometers deep inside our planet
Stones like emeralds, sapphires and rubies are more than just financially valuable or aesthetically valued. Each one is a glittering clue to the extreme physical, chemical and tectonic forces at work deep underground
A tiny slowdown in Earth’s rotation next year could trigger more earthquakes than usual, new research suggests.
In this stunning new Linda Moulton Howe video, she talks about of how planet Earth has been the laboratory playground of Ancient Aliens for over 270 million years.
The risk is growing that Earth will be hit by an asteroid from a meteor stream known as the Taurids, Czech astronomers said on Tuesday.
The Earth is blanketed by a magnetic field. It’s what makes compasses point north, and protects our atmosphere from continual bombardment from space by charged particles such as protons.
Earth’s magnetic field hasn’t gone through a reversal when predicted. It could be within the next 2000 years, but it could happen at any moment.