The world’s largest “carbon capture” facility is now being built in the United States. The construction in Wyoming is known as “Project Bison”...
Materials in the thin film on the ocean’s surface may affect ice cloud formation and thus climate on a global scale, especially when other known ice-forming particles like mineral dust are scarce or absent.
An invisible barrier is keeping dangerous super fast electrons from interfering with our atmosphere, but scientists aren’t entirely sure how.
New technology capable of sending high-intensity laser beams through the atmosphere much farther than was ever possible before could one day be used to guide lightning away from buildings.
The world’s largest “carbon capture” facility is now being built in the United States. The construction in Wyoming is known as “Project Bison”...
Materials in the thin film on the ocean’s surface may affect ice cloud formation and thus climate on a global scale, especially when other known ice-forming particles like mineral dust are scarce or absent.
An invisible barrier is keeping dangerous super fast electrons from interfering with our atmosphere, but scientists aren’t entirely sure how.
New technology capable of sending high-intensity laser beams through the atmosphere much farther than was ever possible before could one day be used to guide lightning away from buildings.