When Our Star Erupts - The 1859 Solar Storm And More

When Our Star Erupts - The 1859 Solar Storm A...

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Teen sleep is getting wrecked by more than just phones

Teens aren’t getting enough sleep! And a two-decade study suggests it’s getting worse. Scientists found that the number of high schoolers getting insufficient sleep — less than seven hours a night — has increased from 69% to 77%. The throughline? There wasn’t one. Teens had bad s ...  Show more

The global fallout of RFK Jr.'s vaccine policies

In his role as secretary of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is changing how the United States approaches vaccines. But those changes aren’t limited to the United States. NPR global health correspondent Gabrielle Emanuel joins Short Wave to talk about two examples ...  Show more

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Initialement prévu en 2025, le prochain pic d’activité solaire devrait finalement avoir lieu d’ici à la fin de l’année 2024. Et cet événement, paroxysme de la perturbation cyclique du champ magnétique de notre étoile, sera suivi de près par les scientifiques : une poign ...  Show more

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When amateur astronomer Richard Carrington gazed through his telescope on the morning of September 1st, 1859, he noticed something weird about the surface of the sun -- it seemed to have clusters of dark spots. Later historians would recognize this as the earliest observation ...

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Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the Sun. The object that gives the Earth its light and heat is a massive ball of gas and plasma 93 million miles away. Thanks to the nuclear fusion reactions taking place at its core, the Sun has been shining for four and a half billion years. ...  Show more