New research indicates that sea turtles seem to navigate across hundreds of miles of open ocean using Earth's magnetic field.
Do you know how birds know where to fly, stop, and stay? Discover the secret of how they migrate so successfully by seeing ...
Pigeons can sense Earth’s magnetic field by detecting tiny electric currents in their inner ears, a team of researchers suggests. Such an inner compass could help to explain how certain animals can ...
For just over two years, a scalar magnetometer developed by Graz University of Technology (TU Graz) and the Space Research Institute (IWF) of the Austrian Academy of Sciences has been on its way to ...
Many migratory birds use Earth’s magnetic field as a compass, but some can also use information from that field to determine more or less where they are on a mental map. Eurasian reed warblers ...
Pigeons and other birds can do it. So can sea turtles and spiny lobsters, moths and mole rats, gray whales and big brown bats ...
Atomic physicists “are jacks of all trades,” according to Alex Sushkov. “You have to have the idea, design the experiment, build the experiment, run the experiment, fix everything, take data, analyze ...
The measurement of magnetic fields has a long and rich history, beginning with the invention of the compass. The earliest known compass, the “south-governor” (sinan), dates back over 2000 years. Among ...
Imagine you step outside, but instead of pulling out your phone to check Google Maps, a glowing, invisible grid is just ...