The United States is aiming Tuesday to launch a new satellite expected to significantly improve forecasts of solar flares and coronal mass ejections—huge plasma bubbles that can crash into Earth, disrupting power grids and communications.
Read Also
- Apple October Mac event: everything we expect to be announced
- Meta rethinks smart glasses with Orion
- The Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra may get a big performance boost
- Todd Philips Thinks His Joker Would Have a Somehow More Homoerotic View of Batman
- Storm Helene kills 44, threatens more 'catastrophic' flooding as cleanup begins
- Brian Williams might host a live election night special for Amazon
- 59 dead in Nepal as downpours trigger floods
- Judge rejects Apple’s last-minute request for a deadline extension in Epic case
- Progress on high seas treaty, but change still far off
- SpaceX launches rescue mission to return stranded astronauts
Latest phys
- Storm Helene kills 44, threatens more 'catastrophic' flooding as cleanup begins
- 59 dead in Nepal as downpours trigger floods
- Progress on high seas treaty, but change still far off
- SpaceX launches rescue mission to return stranded astronauts
- A 20-year struggle for environmental justice—and a public park—in one California city
- Breathing may introduce microplastics to the brain—new study
- Bears have learned to open doors in California town
- Saturday Citations: Octopuses as shift supervisors for fish; universe confounds standard model; extremely old cheese
- Observations explore the nature of transitional millisecond pulsar PSR J1023+0038
- Precise locations of more than 1 million galaxies revealed