In mid-December of 2024, scientists officially updated the World Magnetic Model (WMM), which helps keep track of our planet’s ...
The magnetized rocks of Earth's crust and mantle, also known as the upper lithosphere, accounts for generating 6 percent of ...
As sunspots emerge on the sun's surface close to its equator, their orientations will match the old magnetic field, while ...
Scientists released an update to a model that maps the ever-moving pole and has significant implications for navigation ...
Your navigation system just got a critical update, one that happens periodically because Earth’s magnetic north pole keeps ...
ESA's Swarm mission, utilizing the faint magnetic signals generated by Earth's ocean tides, offers groundbreaking insights ...
Scientists have detected faint magnetic signals from Earth's ocean tides using ESA's Swarm satellites. These signals, caused ...
An extremely slow pulsar has made scientists “slow down” their assumptions about other pulsars. The pace could be caused by a ...
Earth’s magnetic north is not static. Like an anchorless buoy pushed by ocean waves, the magnetic field is constantly on the move as liquid iron sloshes around in the planet’s outer core.
the magnetic north pole’s position is determined by Earth’s magnetic field, which is in constant motion. Over the past few decades, magnetic north’s movement has been unprecedented — it ...