Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Days don’t last as long as they used to.

Must Read


a pot



Check out this new NASA study that confirms that days don’t last as long as they used to.










Gemma Mecca


  • Gemma Mecca
  • History graduate, Master of Journalism and Digital Communication. Editor at Ok Diario. I tell stories, I am a star lover, I follow the moon, Twitter and fashion trends. Expert in consumer news, lifestyle, recipes and Christmas lottery.






the Days don’t last as long as they used to.NASA has released a study that confirms the worst possible omens. It is time to start preparing for a future that is not promising at all, quite the opposite. The situation can sometimes become complicated if we look at what lies ahead. A series of changes that will arrive at times and that may eventually lead to a significant difference in many ways. Experts are very clear about what is happening around us.

NASA has just released a study that might surprise us, something is changing. This way of counting the hours we currently have might disappear altogether. So we will have to adapt to some days that will be particularly shorter and will ultimately be the days that define before and after. Those hours affect us completely in the time we have and in everything that awaits us or is ahead of us. The days will not continue as they are now, and they probably will not continue in the future when everything could change.

NASA confirms this

the NASA devotes a large part of its studies to studying the planet. We say all the time what lies ahead. It can be a significant change in the way we feel everything is moving, and it does so in a way that prepares us for the worst.

Our planet is only a few years old, and it has undergone a series of significant changes over the past hundred years. We have encountered a series of elements that have affected us and continue to affect us. There is no doubt that we are facing a major transformation.

It is time to prepare for the worst, or at least try, through a series of changes that experts are analyzing. Giving himself a series of basic details that may ultimately determine the course of these days. There is no doubt that we will face a series of basic problems.

Climate change that affects the Earth’s rotation and could end up forever changing the course of hours and minutes on this planet.

Days don’t last as long as they used to.

What seemed impossible to cure has become a reality. And so we have arrived at a situation that may be the one that accompanies us in the future. The rotation of the Earth, that is, the movement that determines the length of the days, that is, the time it takes the Earth to rotate on its axis. The minutes of day and night that arrive are affected by these changes that we see in the future.

NASA said on its blog: “Days on Earth are getting a little longer, and this change is accelerating. The reason is related to the same mechanisms that also caused the planet’s axis to tilt.” About 10 meters in the last 120 years“The results come from two recent NASA-funded studies that focused on how climate-related redistribution of ice and water affects Earth’s rotation.”

With this change: “This redistribution occurs when ice sheets and glaciers melt more than they grow from snowfall, and when aquifers lose more groundwater than they replenish from precipitation. These resulting mass changes cause the planet to wobble as it rotates and shift the position of its axis, a phenomenon called polar motion. They also cause the Earth’s rotation, as measured by the length of a day, to slow down. Both phenomena have been recorded since 1900.

But before we get too alarmed, the changes over time are almost imperceptible: “By analyzing the polar motion over 12 decades, scientists attributed almost all of the periodic oscillations in the axis’ position to changes in groundwater, ice sheets, glaciers, and sea levels. According to a recent paper in Nature Geoscience , the collective changes over the 20th century were mainly due to natural climate cycles. The same researchers worked together on a subsequent study that focused on day length. They found that since 2000, days have been getting longer by about 1.33 milliseconds every 100 years, a faster rate than at any time in the past century. The reason: the accelerating melting of glaciers and ice sheets in Antarctica and Greenland due to human-caused greenhouse gas emissions. Their findings were published July 15 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.














































See also  The Minister of Health will participate in this year's first meeting of the Governing Council of the International Vaccine Institute (IVI), in Stockholm - Ministerio de Salud Pública
Latest News

Fast, Private No-Verification Casinos in New Zealand: Insights from Pettie Iv

The world of online gambling has come a long way since its inception, and New Zealand has been no...

More Articles Like This