Live Science on MSN
'Like trying to see fog in the dark': How strange pulses of energy are helping scientists build the ultimate map of the universe
Astronomers are using radio pulses from space to find missing baryonic matter and learn about supermassive black holes, stellar formation and galaxy evolution.
6don MSN
Study links more frequent and severe heat waves to pollution from major fossil fuel producers
A new study has determined that 55 heat waves over the past quarter-century would not have happened without human-caused ...
One quarter of more than 200 heat waves that occurred worldwide this century may have been impossible without human-induced ...
Wetlands in Hampton Roads are an important part of the ecosystem, and a new study attempts to quantify their worth to the community by calculating a monetary value. The study, by the William & Mary ...
A new study links top fossil fuel companies to hundreds of extreme heatwaves worldwide, showing how corporate emissions drive ...
The tourists stopped to spread picnic blankets at a scenic point overlooking the picturesque lake of Lough Tay in Ireland’s ...
Over the past 60 years, scientists have largely succeeded in building a computer model of Earth to see what the future holds.
Scientists say such source attribution could help power litigation aimed at holding the fossil fuel industry accountable for ...
According to ETH Zurich climate researchers, greenhouse gas emissions from major fossil fuel and cement producers are ...
Scientists detect the strongest gravitational wave ever, supporting Einstein’s relativity and Hawking’s black hole area law ...
A new study has linked the deadliest type of disaster — heat waves — directly to major fossil fuel companies and their ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results