News

New images from the European Space Agency’s Biomass mission show how the satellite uses advanced radar to map flows of carbon through our planet’s most precious and remote ecosystems ...
Scientists found a rhythmic mantle plume beneath Ethiopia is slowly tearing Africa apart - hinting at the birth of a new ...
Experts detect mass peaking in several plant roots at two spots, showcasing that bimodality is possibly common in them.
Seen as a long strand with smaller threads branching, the Quipu superstructure contains 68 galaxy clusters spanning 1.4 ...
Under the action of an earthquake, the rammed earth structure will produce shear failure due to insufficient shear strength. This damage is more serious at the weak interface of each rammed earth ...
The double layer structure of two ionic liquids (ILs), 1-butyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium tris (pentafluoroethyl)trifluorophosphate ( [Py 1,4]FAP) and 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium tris ...
The depths of the Earth still hold many surprises. A team of scientists has discovered that objects move horizontally in the Earth's mantle, nearly 1,864 miles (3,000 km) beneath our feet.
This paper presents a time-domain method for the calculation of the horizontal electric field at the earth surface due to lightning, when the earth structure is made up of two parallel horizontal ...
Let's meditate on this form (of the planet earth) and then stop at the prophetic hadith: The earth, from the outside, looks blue, beautiful, but inside it hides fire and molten fire lava. The outer ...
Here’s how it works. Campi Flegrei's hidden layer may explain the period restlessness that researchers have been monitoring for the last 20 years.(Image credit: Vincenzo Izzo via Getty Images) ...
Theoretical difficulties in describing the structure and thermodynamics of an ionic liquid double layer are often associated with the nonspherical shapes of ionic particles and extremely strong ...
Half a century of guesswork For over 50 years, researchers have been puzzling over a strange zone deep inside the earth - the so-called D” layer, around 2700 kilometres beneath our feet.