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Hosted on MSNNASA satellites catch Earth's magnetic field making musicScientists measured a chorus wave emerging from an unexpected place, and confirmed a key piece of a theory about how these ...
When these collisions take place, the icy particles vaporize, forming charged water molecules that interact with Saturn’s magnetic field; ultimately, falling toward Saturn, where they burn up in ...
That's ring rain. It turns out, Saturn's magnetic fields are slowly but surely draining away the rings, so we're lucky to visit the rings now, because every 30 minutes, they lose enough water to ...
Peculiar bursts of energy called chorus waves have been detected in deep space far from our planet, suggesting they could ...
Hosted on MSN2mon
Uranus and Neptune have weird magnetic fields - this might be whyEarth, Jupiter, and Saturn all have dipolar magnetic fields, meaning they have a north and south pole - the type of configuration we're obviously used to. But Uranus and Neptune don't. Instead ...
A mysterious six-sided storm at Saturn’s north pole creates a perfect geometric pattern, with winds reaching up to 330 km/h.
NASA detects mysterious 'chirping' signals, or chorus waves, 165,000 km from Earth, revealing surprising energy transfer in ...
A new study implies that in the past, moons in our solar system may have had rings just like planets do — deepening the mystery of why no ringed moons exist today.
Scientists have recently detected cosmic waves that mimic the sound of birds chirping, coming from an unexpected source in ...
They originate in space, high above a planet’s equator, and they loosely follow the path of its magnetic field. Earth, Jupiter and Saturn are all known to host chorus waves, but now, in a paper ...
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