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Highly Rated Books About Electronic Warfare Available on Amazon

Electronic warfare is still a radar-heavy subject on the bookshelf because the field itself was built inside the contest between emitters, receivers, deception, and protection. That is not just a historical artifact. Current NATO doctrine still treats action in the electromagnetic environment as a core operational function, even as official terminology has shifted in some places toward electromagnetic warfare or electromagnetic spectrum operations. The result on Amazon is strikingly consistent: the strongest electronic warfare titles are rarely broad military bestsellers. They are usually specialist books, often from technical publishers, with modest review counts but strong reader scores and long shelf lives.

MizarVision Company Profile

On February 24, 2026, a small Chinese technology company made its first post on the social media platform X. Four days later, US and Israeli forces launched Operation Epic Fury against Iran. In the hours between, and throughout the conflict that followed, the company had been posting annotated, high-resolution satellite images of American aircraft carriers, stealth fighter deployments, and missile defense batteries across the Middle East. The scale and precision of those releases, from a firm most Western analysts had never heard of, made MizarVision one of the most debated intelligence entities of 2026.

10 Unsettling Sci-Fi Books About Humanity Existing in a Simulation

The notion that reality might be an illusion - that our lives unfold within a simulation - poses significant philosophical and existential questions. Science fiction has long explored this idea, often with chilling results. These stories examine how people respond when the fabric of their world begins to unravel, when agency is revealed to be artificial, or when simulated environments serve as tools of control, experimentation, or escape. The following ten books portray unsettling visions of simulated existence, where nothing is quite as it seems, and the truth may be more terrifying than fiction.

GPS Jamming and the War Over Navigation: What GPSJam.org Reveals About the Middle East...

On March 18, 2026, the GPSJam.org interference map centered on Tehran showed an unusual condition: incomplete data. The explanation was straightforward in a grim way. With Iranian airspace closed following the late-February 2026 military strikes that began the conflict known as Operation Epic Fury, few commercial aircraft were flying over the country to report GPS accuracy. The very absence of data on a tool designed to detect navigation disruption was itself a form of evidence.

What Is Microgravity and How Is It Different From Zero Gravity?

Popular speech treats zero gravity and microgravity as if they mean the same thing. In serious space writing, that shortcut causes confusion. This article takes a firm position on that point: the two terms should not be treated as true synonyms, because one describes a near-weightless environment with small residual accelerations, while the other suggests gravity itself has fallen to zero, which is rarely the case in real spacecraft, real laboratories, or real missions.

The Best Space Warfare Books Available on Amazon

When Russia destroyed the Cosmos 1408 satellite in 2021, the test did not create the military use of space. It exposed how deeply modern armed force already depends on orbital systems for communications, missile warning, intelligence, navigation, targeting, weather data, and timing. That dependence has pushed space warfare out of speculative writing and into a mature body of strategy literature. A serious article about books on the subject has to start there, because the value of these books does not lie in imagined laser battles over Earth. It lies in how well they explain the fact that satellites are already embedded in war on Earth.

What are Hypersonic Weapons, and Why Are They Important?

On May 4, 2023, a Ukrainian Patriot air defense battery shot down a Russian Kh-47M2 Kinzhal missile over Kyiv. Russia had spent years describing the Kinzhal as categorically unstoppable. The intercept put that description to a practical test, and the test failed for the weapons system, not for the defenders.

The Jilin-1 Constellation: China’s Commercial Eye in the Sky

On October 7, 2015, four satellites lifted off from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center aboard a Long March 2D rocket and entered sun-synchronous orbit over the Earth. None weighed more than 230 kilograms. The four were the first members of a constellation that, within a decade, would grow to well over a hundred spacecraft, redefine China's commercial space sector, and draw serious scrutiny from defense analysts across three continents.

Blue Origin Project Sunrise: The Race to Build Data Centers in Orbit

On March 19, 2026, Blue Origin filed an application with the Federal Communications Commission that, in its sheer scale, signals an entirely new chapter for the company best known for building rockets. The filing, submitted by regulatory counsel Kaitlyn Mahoney and senior regulatory engineer Ryan Henry from Blue Origin's Kent, Washington headquarters, seeks authority to launch and operate what the company calls the Blue Origin Orbital Data Center System - known internally as Project Sunrise.

Amazon Leo vs. SpaceX Starlink: The Race to Own Low Earth Orbit

On March 16, 2026, SpaceX crossed a threshold no private company had ever reached: more than 10,000 of its Starlinksatellites were simultaneously in low Earth orbit. That single data point captures the scale of the problem facing Amazon Leo, which had roughly 250 satellites aloft at the same moment. The two companies are often described as competitors in the same market. In terms of current operational footprint, they are not yet in the same category. What makes the comparison worth studying is not where both stand today, but what the eventual convergence means for internet access worldwide, for the economics of satellite broadband, and for the two technology empires behind each network.

The Scientific Domains of Space Exploration

When Apollo 11 returned samples from the Moon in 1969, the scientific work did not begin and end with lunar observation. The mission drew on orbital mechanics, propulsion, geology, materials science, medicine, radio communications, navigation, statistics, and instrument design. The samples themselves were handled through geochemistry, mineralogy, petrology, microscopy, and contamination control. Even that list leaves out the legal and institutional structures that made the mission possible.

What is Archaeoastronomy, and Why Is It Important?

Archaeoastronomy is the study of how earlier societies understood celestial events and worked that knowledge into buildings, ceremonies, calendars, political authority, and sacred practice. It sits between archaeology, astronomy, history, anthropology, and the study of religion. The field asks practical questions, such as whether a temple doorway faces a solstice sunrise, and larger ones, such as whether a ruling class used sky knowledge to regulate ceremony, farming, or public power. The International Astronomical Union now treats this broader family of work under Cultural Astronomy , which reflects how sky knowledge belongs to culture rather than to measurement alone.

The Science of Splashdown

A returning spacecraft does not meet the ocean the way a boat does. It strikes a moving surface after passing through violent heating, rapid deceleration, and a tightly staged descent sequence that leaves little room for error. By the time a crew capsule reaches the final minutes of flight, nearly every earlier design choice is being tested at once: mass distribution, parachute timing, heat shield geometry, structure, seats, flotation, and recovery planning.

The Effects of Outer Space on Hair Growth

Hair does not stop being hair in orbit. It still follows the same biological cycle seen on Earth, with follicles moving through growth, transition, rest, and shedding. Hair follicles are affected by metabolism, hormones, inflammation, immune activity, skin condition, light exposure, sleep timing, nutrition, and stress. Long missions in low Earth orbitdisturb each of those inputs to some degree, which is why the question is more complicated than asking whether zero gravity makes hair grow faster or slower.

Where Is the Center of the Universe?

The question feels like something a child might ask on a clear night, staring at a sky crowded with stars. Where is the middle of all of this? The answer, when it arrives, has a way of unsettling people: there isn't one. Or, more precisely, every point in the universe could legitimately claim to be the center, which turns out to mean the same thing as there being no center at all.

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