Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
How to Keep Time on Mars: Clocks on the Red Planet Would Tick a Bit Differently Than Those on Earth
On average, Martian time ticks roughly 477 millionths of a second faster than terrestrial clocks per Earth day. But the Red ...
The dawn of 2026 marks a thrilling Universal Year 1, a season ripe with fresh opportunities and daring choices. Your ...
Even the best telescopes can’t see exoplanets. It’s all about watching for jiggly stars, blue shifts, and transits.
Paul J. Mackarey, P.T., D.H.Sc., is a doctor in health sciences specializing in orthopedic and sports physical therapy. He is in private practice in Scranton and Clarks Summit and is an associate ...
Morning Overview on MSN
One US state is nailing speeders from 2,000 ft up
From 2,000 feet above the interstate, a small single‑engine plane can see what radar guns on the shoulder cannot: long ...
FlightScope's Mevo Gen2 ($1,299) and i4 Rangefinder ($399) deliver pro-level data without subscriptions. Perfect golf gifts ...
New measurements using gravitational lensing suggest the universe’s current expansion rate does not agree with signals from ...
Even worse, the orbit of Mars is elliptical (think of a slight oval rather than a perfect circle), which means that sometimes ...
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN
Mars time runs faster: relativity’s new challenge for space networks
The passage of time is fundamental to the theory of relativity: how you realize it, how you calculate it, and what influences it,” said Bijunath Patla, a physicist at the National Institute of ...
AI, automation, green fuel, robotics and digital corridors all scaled together in 2025, reshaping global air cargo into a ...
It’s nothing fancy, but the single feeder outside my favourite window attracts a rotating cast of common birds ...
Approaching the new Factor One aero road bike at the launch event in Girona I had the same sense of trepidation that I ...
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