What Time is it on Saturn? We Finally Know

Posted on Categories Discover Magazine

Using a new strategy, one researcher believes that he has solved the longstanding mystery of the length of a day on Saturn. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute) The Time on Saturn For years, the length of a day on Saturn has remained an unsolved puzzle to frustrated astronomers. But now, a graduate student from the University of California Santa Cruz believes that he has finally solved the mystery. Christopher Mankovich used the planet’s rings to determine that a day on Sat ...read more

Does 'Planet Nine' Exist? Astronomers Say An Unseen Disk of Icy Space Rocks May Explain Things

Posted on Categories Discover Magazine

The strange, clustered orbits of trans-Neptunian objects (shown on the right) suggest that a giant planet could be out past Neptune. One new study shows how a giant disk of small rocks could better explain the strange orbits of these TNOs. (Credit: José Antonio Peñas (SINC)). For years, some astronomers have suspected that a planet lies beyond Neptune’s orbit in the far reaches of our solar system — a mysterious, giant planet dubbed “Planet Nine.” Tha ...read more

Researchers Find New Insights Into Role of Little-Understood Placenta

Posted on Categories Discover Magazine

Scientists are trying to learn more about the placenta, which plays a fundamental role in creating a healthy baby. (Credit: sciencepics/shutterstock) More than 15 percent of women in developed countries suffer from pregnancy complications associated with the placenta, the disk-shaped organ that sustains a growing fetus. Now researchers find the placenta adapts when nutrients are scarce. The discovery identifies possible targets for intervention, the researchers say. “Pregnancy complicati ...read more

Compressed Air in Underground Rocks Could Be the Next Batteries

Posted on Categories Discover Magazine

Researchers are pushing for a new kind of energy storage based on compressed air. Using renewable energy, the tech would pump air into underground rocks in the North Sea, and it would power turbines when released. (Credit; NASA) With reports about climate change becoming increasingly dire, it’s increasingly important to find an eco-friendly way to not only generate energy, but also store it. After all, wind turbines and solar power and the like don’t run steadily. So we c ...read more

The Geologic Nature of Our Borders

Posted on Categories Discover Magazine

The U.S.-Mexico border near San Diego, California. Wikimedia Commons. The world’s current political climate is one where we are very aware of borders. They divide what we humans decide is one country, one state, one region from another. They can be very clearly defined where everyone would notice the boundary and in other cases, they are merely defined by imaginary lines we’ve projected on our planet. Much of the time, these boundaries are geologic — that is, they use features ...read more