Astronomers have discovered, for the first time, a powerful hurricane 600 miles wide of plasma in Earth’s upper atmosphere, a phenomenon they call a space hurricane.
According to the researchers, this space hurricane is composed of interlocking elements of magnetic field lines over the North Pole and the fast-moving solar winds.
Brains the size of sesame seeds from a mixture of human and Neanderthal genes lived briefly in petri dishes inside a laboratory, providing bewildering clues about how organs evolved over thousands of years.
Scientists said that plants that absorb minerals from the soil can be grown to rely on advanced technological industries, while many scientists believe that such plants may be a solution to one of the most pressing problems of our time.
In this episode, we also talk about a study conducted by researchers, through which they discovered the precise function of the pathway for transmitting sound from the lung to the ear in frogs, which helps females to locate the appropriate male location for sexual intercourse.
In this episode, we also recall from Memory of Science the biography of the great scientist James Clerk Maxwell, who contributed important equations that explain the emergence of electromagnetic waves, and who Einstein used to hang his picture on the wall of his office, next to pictures of Michael Faraday and Newton.