Scientists discover destroyed remains of lost world falling to Earth

Scientists discover destroyed remains of lost world falling to Earth

🌘 Subscribe 404 To the media to be acquired summarya newsletter about the week’s most exciting and surprising science news and research. The remains of a strange, long-lost world that collapsed before our planet was fully formed are falling to Earth in the form of meteorites. According to new research in Earth and Planetary Science … Read more

Warming oceans weaken sea and land winds in coastal cities – Nature Climate Change

Warming oceans weaken sea and land winds in coastal cities - Nature Climate Change

Forcing SST Traditional low-resolution sea surface temperature datasets cannot resolve local warming disparities in coastal areas, whereas kilometer-scale resolution data depict land-sea temperature gradients 4). Comparing with observations, we find that SST from BCC-CSM2-MR shows strong consistency with both reanalysis datasets and satellite assimilation data in capturing monthly variations in SST among several CMIP6 GCMs … Read more

Japan’s largest renewable energy project begins

Japan's largest renewable energy project begins

For the past few years, Microsoft has been the buyer of first and last resort for companies looking to capture carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. To meet aggressive internal climate goals, the software company purchased more than 70 million tons of carbon removal credits, 40 times more than other companies. Now it’s receding. Heatmap reported … Read more

California’s marine sanctuaries have revitalized some oceans. Will it expand or contract?

Red, black and white sheep's head fish pickled in kelp.

California considering changes to marine protected areas The ongoing petition process could reduce, expand or add new protected areas along the state’s coastline. A decision is expected to be made this summer. More than a decade after the state began setting aside portions of its oceans for conservation, change may be coming to California. marine … Read more

Forget rats and cockroaches: Scientists reveal the species most likely to survive Earth’s last catastrophe

Color image of tardigrade

Forget that cockroaches took over the Earth after a nuclear war. When scientists at Oxford and Harvard Universities set out to determine which creatures would be the last survivors after an apocalyptic catastrophe, they focused on microscopic eight-legged animals that avoid urban pests altogether and reach just half a millimeter in length. of TardigradeThis animal, … Read more

Half of the universe’s ordinary matter is missing, astronomers say they’ve found it in a vast hydrogen cloud

Map of space microwave background. The circles indicate spots where ionized hydrogen scattered radiation.

Ordinary matter, the atoms that make up stars, planets, and living things, make up only about 15% of the total matter in the universe. The rest is thought to be due to dark matter, but it has not been directly detected. However, more than half of that 15% remains unexplained, leaving gaps in cosmological models. … Read more

Every time you use GPS, you rely on Einstein’s laws of relativity. Here’s how:

Einstein’s relativity theories power everyday navigation . (AI-generated image: OpenAI)

Every time you drive and use Google Maps to make a right turn or use GPS to tell a friend where you are, Albert Einstein’s two laws of relativity are invoked. This is the reason. GPS (Global Positioning System) relies on satellites orbiting at high speeds approximately 20,000 kilometers above the Earth. Clocks on these … Read more

D2D services risk becoming too complex and siloed

D2D services risk becoming too complex and siloed

At the recent Mobile World Conference 2026 in Barcelona, ​​the presence of Direct-to-Device (D2D) satellite services and the large number of press releases related to agreements signed between D2D satellite service providers and mobile network operators (MNOs) gave the impression that large-scale implementation of D2D services by MNOs is imminent. However, the truth is quite … Read more

A photographer’s journey deep into the Canadian rainforest in search of rare spirit bears

A white bear sits on a mossy rock in a lush forest, with trees, ferns and fallen logs nearby. A stream flows in the background, adding to the peaceful natural scenery.

Jacques Plant/Figure 1 Publishing In 2011, as a teenager, photographer Jacques Plante came across a cover that read: national geographic Featuring British Columbia’s Great Bear Rainforest. It was a defining moment in my life when I fell in love with that image and the story of a rare polar bear living in one of the … Read more