Scientists say a vast, Earth-sized region of unexpectedly high temperatures in Jupiter's upper atmosphere was caused by a massive wave of solar wind.
A solar wind event from 2017 that hit Jupiter and compressed its magnetosphere created a hot region spanning half Jupiter's circumference.
Though wildly different in so many ways, Earth and Saturn's moon Titan have something important in common. Among all the objects in the solar system, they're the only two with liquids on their ...
Even gargantuan Jupiter, with its whirling superstorms and volatile temperatures, has a soft side. A team of researchers ...
How can Uranus be used to indirectly study its moons and identify if they possess subsurface oceans? This is what a recent ...
Lyrid meteor shower, which peaks the night of April 22, is one of the main April highlights for sky-watchers. This meteor ...
A massive solar windstorm in 2017 compressed Jupiter's magnetosphere "like a giant squash ball," a new study reports.
“The solar wind squished Jupiter’s magnetic shield like a giant squash ball. This created a super-hot region that spans half ...
DOHA: Qatar Calendar House has announced that four planets will align with the Moon in the skies over Qatar during ...
Planets' temperatures are largely influenced by their structural characteristics and proximity to the Sun, however, Venus ...
The discovery of salty mineral evaporites on Ryugu indicates that watery environments may have been widespread in the early ...
As per the study conducted by scientists at Ohio State University, these gas giants could form in just 1 to 2 million years, ...