Right now, as a passenger on planet Earth, you’re zooming through space at incredible speeds. But why can't you feel it?
Earth's rotation on its axis is the fundamental reason for the cycle of day and night. As our planet spins, one side faces the Sun, experiencing dayli ...
5don MSN
How Mars impacts Earth's climate
Earth's climate has swung between ice ages and warmer periods for millions of years, driven by subtle changes in our planet's ...
The hunt is on for terrestrial exoplanets in habitable zones, and some of the most promising candidates were discovered ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Earth speeds at 66,000 mph and hidden forces shape our climate
Every second, our planet is racing through space at tens of thousands of miles per hour, yet the air outside the window ...
The Cool Down on MSNOpinion
Scientists issue warning about powerful phenomenon that could change Earth's rotation — here's what you need to know
If warming continues at this pace, coastal and island communities near the Indian, Pacific, and Western Atlantic oceans will ...
Space.com on MSN
Uranus may have more in common with Earth than we thought, 40-year-old Voyager 2 probe data shows
Revisiting old data from Voyager 2, scientists have worked out how a dense, shocked region of the solar wind could have ...
Simulation results show that Mars, despite its similar size to Earth, has a considerable influence on the Milankovitch cycles ...
New research shows Uranus’ fierce radiation belts were a short-lived blast from a solar storm, reshaping what Voyager 2 ...
Even worse, the orbit of Mars is elliptical (think of a slight oval rather than a perfect circle), which means that sometimes ...
Space is inaccessible to the vast majority of us, but it’s not as far away as you might think. The von Kármán Line, which is ...
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