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2022 Nobel Prize gave in Physics to Alain Aspect, John F. Clauser and Anton Zeilinger "for experiments with entangled ph...
05/10/2022

2022 Nobel Prize gave in Physics to Alain Aspect, John F. Clauser and Anton Zeilinger "for experiments with entangled photons, establishing the violation of bell inequalities and pioneering quantum information science".

2022 Nobel Prize gave in Chemistry to Carolyn R. Bertozzi , Morten Meldal and K. Barry Sharpless "for the development of...
05/10/2022

2022 Nobel Prize gave in Chemistry to Carolyn R. Bertozzi , Morten Meldal and K. Barry Sharpless "for the development of click chemistry and bioorthogonal chemistry".


Swedish geneticist Svante Paabo awarded 2022 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine "for his discoveries concerning the g...
03/10/2022

Swedish geneticist Svante Paabo awarded 2022 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine "for his discoveries concerning the genomes of extinct hominins and human evolution."

01/10/2022

PM Narendra Modi launched 5G services in India 🇮🇳.
5G technology will provide seamless coverage, high data rate, low latency, and highly reliable communications. It will increase energy efficiency, spectrum efficiency and network efficiency.

Actress Asha Parekh received the Dadasaheb Phalke Award by President Draupadi Murmu at the 68th National Film Awards cer...
30/09/2022

Actress Asha Parekh received the Dadasaheb Phalke Award by President Draupadi Murmu at the 68th National Film Awards ceremony 2020.

30/09/2022

Suriya Sivakumar awarded from Rajat Kamal by president Draupadi Murmu for best actor for best feature film 'Soorarai Pottru'(Tamil) and best actress Aparna Balamurali for 'Soorarai Pottru' in 68th National Film Awards 2020.
Congratulations to Suriya Sivakumar & Aparna Balamurali 💐🌹🙏❤️

30/09/2022

68वें राष्ट्रीय फिल्म पुरस्कार 2020(68th National Film Awards-20) के लिए राष्ट्रपति श्रीमती द्रौपदी मुर्मू ने गीतकार मनोज मुन्तशिर(@ Manoj Muntashir ) को फिल्म - साइना के सर्वश्रेष्ठ बोल (Best Lyrics) के लिए रजत कमल से सम्मानित किया। आपको बहुत-बहुत बधाई सर!💐🙏आपका सम्मान 'हिन्दी' का सम्मान है। ❤️

Lieutenant General (Retd) Anil Chauhan appointed as new Chief of Defence Staff(CDS).
29/09/2022

Lieutenant General (Retd) Anil Chauhan appointed as new Chief of Defence Staff(CDS).

❓WHY ARE  ?  The earth is often called the blue planet, but   is the closest thing to this denomination.But the answer t...
06/01/2020

❓WHY ARE ?

The earth is often called the blue planet, but is the closest thing to this denomination.But the answer to these striking colors is not water but methane.
Neptune's upper atmosphere is made up of 80% , 19% with a trace of 1% and other ice such as and water.Uranus has a similar composition.
Sunlight hits the planets and is absorbed by their atmospheres.Part of the light is reflected by clouds and returns to space.
Methane in Uranus clouds is more likely to absorb colors at the red end of the spectrum, and is more likely to reflect light at the blue-green end of the spectrum.
And that is why planets have such a characteristic color.

Can’t believe what is happening in   right now with horrific bushfire. About   animals have been killed by the bushfire ...
06/01/2020

Can’t believe what is happening in right now with horrific bushfire.
About animals have been killed by the bushfire in .
I hope they will get it under control as soon as possible.
🙏🙏🙏

【Happy New Year】Let there be peace and prosperity!
01/01/2020

【Happy New Year】
Let there be peace and prosperity!

The gas giant   and our home, the Earth, in a comparison of size.   is the last planet of the Solar System.It is about 4...
04/12/2019

The gas giant and our home, the Earth, in a comparison of size. is the last planet of the Solar System.It is about 4 billion kilometers from Earth.

Since 1980 Kailash Satyarthi has freed thousands of children from slave-like conditions. He was awarded the Nobel Peace ...
03/12/2019

Since 1980 Kailash Satyarthi has freed thousands of children from slave-like conditions. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014 for his work on behalf of young people.

Nearly a decade after the foundation of special relativity, Albert Einstein submitted his paper 'The Field Equations of ...
27/11/2019

Nearly a decade after the foundation of special relativity, Albert Einstein submitted his paper 'The Field Equations of Gravitation' for publication in 1915, which gave the correct field equations for the theory of general relativity.

In actual fact, the German mathematician David Hilbert had submitted an article containing the correct field equations for general relativity five days before Einstein. Hilbert never claimed priority for this theory.

Image: Public domain, created by NASA. High-precision test of general relativity by the Cassini space probe (artist's impression): radio signals sent between the Earth and the probe (green wave) are delayed by the warping of spacetime (blue lines) due to the Sun's mass.

Remembering physicist Niels Bohr, who was awarded the 1922 Physics Prize for his model of the structure of the atom. The...
25/11/2019

Remembering physicist Niels Bohr, who was awarded the 1922 Physics Prize for his model of the structure of the atom.

The discoveries of the electron and radioactivity at the end of the 19th century led to different models for the structure of the atom. In 1913, Niels Bohr proposed a theory for the hydrogen atom based on quantum theory that energy is transferred only in certain well defined quantities. Electrons should move around the nucleus but only in prescribed orbits. When jumping from one orbit to another with lower energy, a light quantum is emitted. Bohr's theory could explain why atoms emitted light in fixed wavelengths.

Learn more about Niels Bohr: https://bit.ly/2rTxCao

"As a child, I wanted to be a physicist. I begged my mother to let me go to Tokyo to study physics. I promised I would w...
22/11/2019

"As a child, I wanted to be a physicist. I begged my mother to let me go to Tokyo to study physics. I promised I would win the Nobel Prize in Physics. So, 50 years later, I returned to my village and said to my mother, 'See, I have kept my promise. I won the Nobel Prize.' 'No,' said my mother, who has very fine sense of humour, 'You promised it would be in physics!'"

- Kenzaburo Oe, awarded the 1994 Nobel Prize in Literature.

Learn more about Oe's life in his biography: https://bit.ly/37k4yJp

Nobel Laureate August Krogh, born on this day, shed light on how our bodies supply more oxygen to our muscles when exerc...
21/11/2019

Nobel Laureate August Krogh, born on this day, shed light on how our bodies supply more oxygen to our muscles when exercising than when resting.

Krogh developed methods for precisely measuring blood oxygen levels and explained how oxygen supply to muscles is regulated based on workload. Previously, it was thought that the blood's rate of flow increased during exertion. During the 1910s, however, Krogh showed that it was rather oxygen flow that was regulated by the opening of smaller blood vessels, capillaries. When resting, relatively few capillaries are open.

Read his paper 'The supply of oxygen to the tissues and the regulation of the capillary circulation'.

The   in   for 2019 is awarded to the Austrian author   “for an influential work that with linguistic ingenuity has expl...
12/10/2019

The in for 2019 is awarded to the Austrian author “for an influential work that with linguistic ingenuity has explored the periphery and the specificity of human experience.”

Peter Handke was born 1942 in a village named Griffen, located in the region Kärnten in southern Austria. This was also the birthplace of his mother Maria, who belonged to the Slovenian minority. His father was a German soldier that he would not meet before reaching adulthood himself. Instead, he and his siblings grew up with his mother and her new husband, Bruno Handke. After a period in severely war-damaged Berlin the family returned and settled down in Griffen. After finishing village school he was admitted to a Christian high school in the city of Klagenfurt. From 1961 he studied law at the University of Graz but broke off his studies a few years later when his debut novel ‘Die Hornissen’ (1966) was published. It is an experimental “double fiction” in which the main character is recollecting fragments of another, for the reader unknown, novel. Together with the play ‘Publikumsbeschimpfung’ (‘Offending the Audience’, 1969) – which was staged the same year and whose main concept is to have the actors insulting the audience simply for attending – he certainly set his mark on the literary scene. This mark hardly diminished after his description of contemporary German literature as suffering from “Beschreibungsimpotence” (description impotence) at the meeting of Gruppe 47 held in Princeton, USA. He made sure to distance himself from prevailing demands on community-oriented and political positions and instead found much of his own literary inspiration within the New Novel-movement in French literature (le Nouveau Roman).

More than fifty years later, having produced a great number of works in different genres, he has established himself as one of the most influential writers in Europe after the Second World War. His bibliography contains novels, essays, note books, dramatic works and screenplays. Since 1990 he has been based in Chaville, southwest of Paris, and from here he has made many productive journeys. His works are filled with a strong desire to discover and to make his discoveries come to live by finding new literary expressions for them. As he has claimed: “To be receptive is everything”. With this as his objective he manages to charge even the smallest of details in every day experience with explosive significance. His work is thus characterised by a strong adventurous spirit, but also by a nostalgic inclination, first visible in the beginning of the 1980s, in the drama ‘Über die Dörfer’ 1981 (‘Walk about the Villages’, 2015) and particularly in the novel ‘Die Wiederholung’,1986 (‘Repetition’, 1988), where the protagonist Georg Kobal returns to Handke’s Slovenic origins on the maternal side.

Motivating this return to the origins is the need to remember and restitute the dead. But by the term “Wiederholung” one should not understand strict repetition. In the novel ‘Die Wiederholung’ memory is transformed in the writing act. Likewise, in the dreamplay ‘Immer noch Sturm’, 2010 (‘Storm Still’, 2014), also taking place in Slovenia, the idealised brother of Handke’s mother, Gregor, who was killed in the war, is resurrected as a partisan opposing the N**i occupation of Austria. In Handke, the past must be continuously rewritten but cannot as in Proust be recovered in a pure act of remembrance.

In effect, Handke’s writing takes its departure in catastrophe, as he reports in ‘Das Gewicht der Welt’, 1977, (‘The Weight of the World’, 1984), the work that introduces the vast production of daily notes during the years. This experience is memorably depicted in the short and harsh, but deeply affectionate book written after his mother’s su***de ‘Wunschloses Unglück’, 1972 (‘A Sorrow Beyond Dreams: a life story’, 1975). Handke would probably subscribe to Maurice Maeterlinck’s words: “We are never more intimately at one with ourselves than after an irreparable catastrophe. Then we seem to have found ourselves again and recovered an unknown and essential part of our being. A strange stillness presents itself.” These moments can be recognised in several of Handke’s works, and they are not seldom combined with the epiphanic presence of the world, notably in ‘Die Stunde der wahren Empfindung’, 1975, (‘A Moment of True Feeling’, 1977).

The peculiar art of Handke is the extraordinary attention to landscapes and the material presence of the world, which has made cinema and painting two of his greatest sources of inspiration. At the same time his writing shows an unending quest for existential meaning. Therefore, wandering and migration is his primary mode of activity, and the road is the place for what he has called his “epic step”. We can see this in his first major attempt to describe a landscape, ‘Langsame Heimkehr’ 1979 (‘Slow Homecoming’, 1985), often viewed as a turning point in his writing. The “epic step” is however not bound to genre, but is also visible in the dramatic work, as is recently demonstrated in ‘Die Unschuldigen, ich und die Unbekannte am Rand der Landstrasse. Ein Schauspiel in vier Jahreszeiten’ (2015).

Often Handke points at the medieval writer Wolfram von Eschenbach and the Quest Romance as a model of narrative, where an erring solitary hero in search of the Holy Grail is put to the test. This is wonderfully displayed in the recent, great novel ‘Die Obstdiebin oder Einfache Fahrt ins Landesinnere’ (2017), where the young heroine, Alexia, is erring in the interior of the long French province Picardie not knowing what strange fortune she is expecting. In another of his novels, ‘Der Chinese des Schmerzes’, 1983 (Across, 1986) the protagonist Andreas Loser commits a murderous, quite unpremeditated act that dramatically changes his life span. The description of the outskirts of the city of Salzburg is marvellously rich and precise, while the intrigue is rigorously reduced, almost nonexistent.

Handke has said that “the classics have saved me”, and not least the legacy of Goethe is everywhere present, testifying to Handke’s will to return to the senses and the living experience of man. One cannot least observe this in his notebooks, in the recent ‘Vor der Baumschattenwand nachts: Zeichen und Anflüge von der Peripherie 2007-2015’ (2016). The importance of the classics is also evident in his translations from ancient Greek, works by Aeschylus, Euripides, Sophocles. He has also made a long series of translations from French and English, works by Emanuel Bove, René Char, Marguerite Duras, Julien Green, Patrick Modiano, Francis Ponge and Shakespeare.

At the same time Handke remains acutely contemporary and one aspect of this is his relation to Franz Kafka. In the same vein Handke must revolt against his paternal heritage, that in his case was perverted by the N**i regime. Handke chose the maternal, Slovenic line of heritage, a significant reason for his antinationalistic myth of his Balkan origins. Although he has, at times, caused controversy he cannot be considered an engaged writer in the sense of Sartre, and he gives us no political programs.

Handke has chosen exile as a productive life path, where the experience of passing thresholds and geographic borders recurs. If he can be described as the writer of place it is not primarily the metropoles but the suburbs and the landscape that attract his attention. He recaptures the unseen and makes us part of it. This happens in particular in some of his most powerful narratives, ‘Mein Jahr in der Niemandsbucht. Ein Märchen aus den neuen Zeiten’ from 1994 (‘My Year in the No-Man’s Bay’, 1998) or the above mentioned ‘Die Obstdiebin’, both reversing the tradition from Baudelaire onwards that made Paris the mythic centre of modern literature. Together with the young heroine Alexia we are here on foot moving away from the proclaimed centre into the French region of Picardie, and the names of the small villages are suddenly filled with intoxicating beauty. Handke subverts our ideas of the centrally governed state, and makes us realise that the centre is everywhere.

Learn more
Press release: https://bit.ly/2pgsLyQ
2019 bio-bibliography: https://bit.ly/2M6KRuI

 The Norwegian Nobel Committee has decided to award the 2019   to       for his efforts to achieve peace and internation...
12/10/2019


The Norwegian Nobel Committee has decided to award the 2019 to for his efforts to achieve peace and international cooperation, and in particular for his decisive initiative to resolve the border conflict with neighbouring Eritrea. The prize is also meant to recognise all the stakeholders working for peace and reconciliation in Ethiopia and in the East and Northeast African regions.

When Abiy Ahmed became Prime Minister in April 2018, he made it clear that he wished to resume peace talks with Eritrea. In close cooperation with Isaias Afwerki, the President of Eritrea, Abiy Ahmed quickly worked out the principles of a peace agreement to end the long “ , ” stalemate between the two countries. These principles are set out in the declarations that Prime Minister Abiy and President Afwerki signed in Asmara and Jeddah last July and September. An important premise for the breakthrough was Abiy Ahmed’s unconditional willingness to accept the arbitration ruling of an international boundary commission in 2002.

Peace does not arise from the actions of one party alone. When Prime Minister Abiy reached out his hand, President Afwerki grasped it, and helped to formalise the peace process between the two countries. The Norwegian Nobel Committee hopes the peace agreement will help to bring about positive change for the entire populations of Ethiopia and Eritrea.

In Ethiopia, even if much work remains, Abiy Ahmed has initiated important reforms that give many citizens hope for a better life and a brighter future. He spent his first 100 days as Prime Minister lifting the country’s state of emergency, granting amnesty to thousands of political prisoners, discontinuing media censorship, legalising outlawed opposition groups, dismissing military and civilian leaders who were suspected of corruption, and significantly increasing the influence of women in Ethiopian political and community life. He has also pledged to strengthen democracy by holding free and fair elections.

In the wake of the peace process with Eritrea, Prime Minister Abiy has engaged in other peace and reconciliation processes in East and Northeast Africa. In September 2018 he and his government contributed actively to the normalisation of diplomatic relations between Eritrea and Djibouti after many years of political hostility. Additionally, Abiy Ahmed has sought to mediate between Kenya and Somalia in their protracted conflict over rights to a disputed marine area. There is now hope for a resolution to this conflict. In Sudan, the military regime and the opposition have returned to the negotiating table. On the 17th of August, they released a joint draft of a new constitution intended to secure a peaceful transition to civil rule in the country. Prime Minister Abiy played a key role in the process that led to the agreement.

Ethiopia is a country of many different languages and peoples. Lately, old ethnic rivalries have flared up. According to international observers, up to three million Ethiopians may be internally displaced. That is in addition to the million or so refugees and asylum seekers from neighbouring countries. As Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed has sought to promote reconciliation, solidarity and social justice. However, many challenges remain unresolved. Ethnic strife continues to escalate, and we have seen troubling examples of this in recent weeks and months. No doubt some people will think this year’s prize is being awarded too early. The Norwegian Nobel Committee believes it is now that Abiy Ahmed’s efforts deserve recognition and need encouragement.

The Norwegian Nobel Committee hopes that the Nobel Peace Prize will strengthen Prime Minister Abiy in his important work for peace and reconciliation. Ethiopia is Africa’s second most populous country and has East Africa’s largest economy. A peaceful, stable and successful Ethiopia will have many positive side-effects, and will help to strengthen fraternity among nations and peoples in the region. With the provisions of Alfred Nobel’s will firmly in mind, the Norwegian Nobel Committee sees Abiy Ahmed as the person who in the preceding year has done the most to deserve the Nobel Peace Prize for 2019.

Learn more:
https://bit.ly/2osXsR6

 The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the 2019   in   “for contributions to our understanding of t...
09/10/2019


The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the 2019 in “for contributions to our understanding of the evolution of the universe and Earth’s place in the cosmos” with one half to James Peebles “for theoretical discoveries in physical cosmology” and the other half jointly to and “for the discovery of an exoplanet orbiting a solar-type star.”

This year’s in Physics rewards new understanding of the universe’s structure and history, and the first discovery of a planet orbiting a solar-type star outside our solar system.

James Peebles took on the cosmos, with its billions of galaxies and galaxy clusters. His theoretical framework, which he developed over two decades, starting in the mid-1960s, is the foundation of our modern understanding of the universe’s history, from the Big Bang to the present day. Peebles’ discoveries have led to insights about our cosmic surroundings, in which known matter comprises just five percent of all the matter and energy contained in the universe. The remaining 95 percent is hidden from us. This is a mystery and a challenge to modern physics.

and have explored our home galaxy, the , looking for unknown worlds. In 1995, they made the very first discovery of a planet outside our solar system, an exoplanet, orbiting a solar-type star. Their discovery challenged our ideas about these strange worlds and led to a revolution in astronomy. The more than 4,000 known exoplanets are surprising in their richness of forms, as most of these planetary systems look nothing like our own, with the Sun and its planets. These discoveries have led researchers to develop new theories about the physical processes responsible for the birth of planets.

This year’s laureates have transformed our ideas about the cosmos. While James Peebles’ theoretical discoveries contributed to our understanding of how the universe evolved after the , Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz explored our neighbourhoods on the hunt for unknown planets. Their discoveries have forever changed our conceptions of the world.

Learn more
Press release: https://bit.ly/2mQUHZj
Popular information: https://bit.ly/2phPz1j
Advanced information: https://bit.ly/2on5URQ

  is a drought-resistant crop ideal for arid climate, it occupies just 2.1 % of the world’s arable land, yet meets 27% o...
08/10/2019

is a drought-resistant crop ideal for arid climate, it occupies just 2.1 % of the world’s arable land, yet meets 27% of the world’s textiles need

On the occasion of Union Textile Minister Smriti Zubin Irani to participate in the plenary session in today

Incredible Pictures from the   around the world! Millions are marching today.This is torino,Italy.Incredible Campaign By...
28/09/2019

Incredible Pictures from the around the world! Millions are marching today.This is torino,Italy.
Incredible Campaign By
My millions of greetings bow to your foot .....🙏💕👏

The global continues by !

to Greta thunberg against !

Even as the Shahenshah of Bollywood, Amitabh Bachchan, is selected for the   Award, a brief look at the highlights of hi...
26/09/2019

Even as the Shahenshah of Bollywood, Amitabh Bachchan, is selected for the Award, a brief look at the highlights of his life and career so far...

Graphics courtesy : KBK

  is a 16 year old Swedish environmental activist focused on the risks posed by climate change.She striked for action  m...
25/09/2019

is a 16 year old Swedish environmental activist focused on the risks posed by climate change.

She striked for action
may be the “greatest threat” to the fossil fuel industry.
So,I want to a lot of thanks for your continuous struggle.
Stay hard and Never give up because our future, our planet is in danger.

She has been for Nobel Peace Prize. She deserves it.



...........🙏👏👍🙏❤️.....................

Economic Survey 2018-19Furthering Industrial growth & Infrastructure: Overall index of 8 core Industries registered a gr...
17/09/2019

Economic Survey 2018-19

Furthering Industrial growth & Infrastructure: Overall index of 8 core Industries registered a growth rate of 4.3 percent in 2018-19

    ...💐🇮🇳🙏💕
11/09/2019



...💐🇮🇳🙏💕

05/09/2019
 # India's GDP growth falls to six-year low of 5% in Q1.
01/09/2019

# India's GDP growth falls to six-year low of 5% in Q1.

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