News

A new AI model from the University of Bern predicts planetary systems likely to host Earth-like planets. It could boost the ...
First ever supercomputer simulations of Mars with a fully molten core could explain the Red Planet's unusual magnetic field. Billions of years ago, Mars had an active magnetic field. Mysteriously, its ...
One promising model proposed in 2023 described an inner core that in the past had spun faster than Earth itself, but was now ...
The moon is intimately familiar to most people simply because it's a constant in the night sky, but its interior is more of a ...
Scientists released an updated version of the World Magnetic Model (WMM) because they needed to adapt to these continuous ...
New research suggests that Earth's first crust, formed over 4.5 billion years ago, already carried the chemical traits we ...
It’s long been thought that tectonic plates needed to dive beneath each other to create the chemical fingerprint we see in ...
Scientists have uncovered new information about the Earth's core: it may not be completely solid. Instead, its center may be more malleable than expected and has changed shape in recent years.
The work was done by Haruki Takezawa and Kei Hirose at the University of Tokyo and colleagues, who suggest that Earth’s core could host a vast reservoir of primordial helium-3 – reshaping our ...