the James Webb telescope has arrived at the position in space where it will observe the Universe. The Lagrange Point 2, as it's known, is a million miles (1.5 million km) from Earth on its nightside.
The disagreement in the rate of expansion of the universe, the Hubble tension, could arise from the fact Earth sits in an under-dense supervoid region of space. Just as Homo sapiens once exploded ...
However, the Universe has not always been the same ... you’re seeing other stars in the Milky Way. Due to the Earth’s position inside the Galaxy, we see the stars of the other arms of the ...
17, the National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) and the British Geological Survey (BGS) released an updated version of the World Magnetic Model, a prediction for how Earth's magnetic ...
Why does the Universe take the shape it does? To understand our place in the cosmos, we look back to see what has gone before. Wind the clock back through the history of the Earth, the Solar ...