Joe Seer/Shutterstock
The civil procedure rules on settlement are preventing true access to justice.
The corona of the sun can be clearly seen in this image taken in 2007.
(NASA/JPL-Caltech/NRL/GSFC)
The solar corona can be seen during the solar eclipse on April 8. Astronomers are still trying to figure out the mysteries of the corona, including why it’s so hot.
Photograph: Nasa (Goddard Space Flight Center)
The Peregrine and Nova-C landers are due to carry out valuable science at two diverse lunar locations.
Jonas Weckschmied/Unsplash
The preliminary global-average temperature anomaly for September is a shocking 1.7°C. These are the drivers of current record-breaking heat.
Rupert Murdoch in 1986.
PA Images / Alamy Stock Photo
Newspaper owners used to wield huge political influence – but as Rupert Murdoch steps down for his son Lachlan can the same be said of today’s?
A detail from the astronomical ceiling at the Dendera temple in Egypt.
(kairoinfo4u/flickr)
Some time measurements, like months and years, use the movements of the moon and sun, respectively. But other time measurements, like the hour, aren’t clearly connected to astronomical phenomena.
Elizabeth Campbell operating the Floyd Telescope, 1922 total solar eclipse.
State Library Western Australia 4131B/3/8, enhanced detail
History might give you the impression astronomical discoveries were only done by men. But women were participating in scientific expeditions of eclipses too, even though it wasn’t easy.
The documentary fails to accurately portray Sheryl Gascoigne as the victim of domestic abuse perpetrated by her then-husband, Paul Gascoigne.
PA Images / Alamy Stock Photo
Contemporary fiction on screen increasingly tells the stories of abusive men in a realistic way. This documentary does not.
PhotoVisions/Shutterstock
It’s often said that the aurora, or the northern lights, is caused by ‘particles from the Sun’. But in reality things are more complicated.
The land surface heats up during the day because of solar radiation coming in from the sun.
Ed Connor/Shutterstock
This is a really important question, and one which climatologists work on in many aspects of their jobs.
Shutterstock
To tell you the truth, nobody really knows. But it’s probably got to do with the fact that signals from your nose and your eyes arrive in the same area of your brain.
Ian Francis / Alamy Stock Photo
The campaign to stop newspapers publishing topless photos of women relied on a special brand of emotional energy.
Lenscap Photography / shutterstock
An academic expert in environmental storytelling reads the Sun and the Express.
Light from our setting sun reflecting off storm clouds can give off a some vivid shades of pinks, purples and oranges.
Jake Clark
It’s all to do with the light from the Sun and a blanket of air wrapped around Earth called the ‘atmosphere’.
Author Andrew Sullivan has gone from blogging to writing for mainstream publications to blogging again, this time on Substack.
T.J. Kirkpatrick/Getty Images
High-profile media figures are defecting to Substack, where readers will have to pay a subscription to read their work. Could Substack remind news consumers that paying for journalism is worth it?
British Muslims protesting their treatment by the UK media in 2007. Nothing much has changed.
Tim Ireland/PA Archive/PA Images
Press reports about Islam have often been misleading or discriminatory. This new advice does little to help journalists avoid that.
The sun emitting a sudden flash of light—a solar flare.
NASA
Has the Sun entered a stage of old age?
Lenscap Photography
It’s a bold move, but publishers are increasingly desperate to attract digital readers to offset the fall in print sales.
SpaceX’s Dragon 2 will carry humans for the first time in 2020.
NASA/SpaceX
From alien life to human spaceflight, 2020 may deliver some exciting news.
Lenscap Photography via Shutterstock
Analysis of the first week of the campaign shows that not all publicity is good publicity.