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Happy Teachers' Day 2019: Wishes Images Download, Quotes, Status, Greeting Card, HD Wallpapers, Messages, SMS, Photos, GIF Pics, and Pictures


Happy Teachers' Day 2019: Wishes Images Download, Quotes, Status, Greeting Card, HD Wallpapers, Messages, SMS, Photos, GIF Pics, and Pictures

Happy Teachers' Day 2019: Wishes Images Download, Quotes, Status, Greeting Card, HD Wallpapers, Messages, SMS, Photos, GIF Pics, and Pictures

Happy Teachers' Day 2019: Wishes Images Download, Quotes, Status, Greeting Card, HD Wallpapers, Messages, SMS, Photos, GIF Pics, and Pictures

Happy Teachers' Day 2019: Wishes Images HD, Status, Quotes, SMS, Messages, Greetings Card Download, Shayari, Photos, GIF Pics, Wallpapers for Whatsapp and Facebook

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Happy Teachers' Day 2019: Wishes Images HD, Status, Quotes, SMS, Messages, Greetings Card Download, Shayari, Photos, GIF Pics, Wallpapers for Whatsapp and Facebook

By Lifestyle Desk |New Delhi |Updated: September 5, 2019 6:58:06 pm

Happy Teachers’ Day 2019: Quotes, Wishes Images, Status, SMS, Messages, Photos for WhatsApp and Facebook

Happy Teachers' Day 2019 Wishes Status, Images, Quotes, Messages: A teacher is not only giving us the much-needed impetus to conceive our dreams, they are also dreaming with us.

Teachers Day 2019, teachers day, happy teachers day, teachers day images, happy teachers day 2019, teachers day images hd, teachers day images download, happy teachers day card, teachers day card, happy teachers day card, happy teachers day quotes, happy teachers day status, happy teachers day pics, happy teachers day images download, happy teachers day greetings card, happy teachers day messages, happy teachers day photos, happy teachers day pictures, teachers day pictures, teachers day quotes, teachers day images hd download, teachers day status
Happy Teachers’ Day 2019 Wishes Images, Quotes: This Teachers’ Day, honour your guides and mentors.


Happy Teachers’ Day 2019 Wishes Status, Images, Quotes, Messages: We are, because we read. We read, because they taught us how to. We realise the importance of our teachers when they are no longer there to guide us every step of the way.

Happy Teachers' Day 2019: Wishes Images HD, Status, Quotes, SMS, Messages, Greetings Card Download, Shayari, Photos, GIF Pics, Wallpapers for Whatsapp and Facebook

Happy Teachers' Day 2019: Wishes Images HD, Status, Quotes, SMS, Messages, Greetings Card Download, Shayari, Photos, GIF Pics, Wallpapers for Whatsapp and Facebook

Happy Teachers' Day 2019: Wishes Images HD, Status, Quotes, SMS, Messages, Greetings Card Download, Shayari, Photos, GIF Pics, Wallpapers for Whatsapp and Facebook


Happy Teachers' Day 2019: Wishes Images HD, Status, Quotes, SMS, Messages, Greetings Card Download, Shayari, Photos, GIF Pics, Wallpapers for Whatsapp and Facebook

Happy Teachers' Day 2019: Wishes Images HD, Status, Quotes, SMS, Messages, Greetings Card Download, Shayari, Photos, GIF Pics, Wallpapers for Whatsapp and Facebook

Teacher's Day 2019 Speech, Quotes, Essay, Bhashan, Nibandh: History, Importance, Significance of Teacher's Day Celebration in India?

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Teacher's Day 2019 Speech, Quotes, Essay, Bhashan, Nibandh: History, Importance, Significance of Teacher's Day Celebration in India?

By Lifestyle Desk |New Delhi |Updated: September 5, 2019 6:56:38 pm

Teachers’ Day 2019: History, Importance and Significance of Teachers’ Day

Teacher's Day 2019: The day holds great importance for students and teachers, and is marked with revelry and different programmes planned for teachers in schools and colleges.

teachers day, teachers day 2019, happy teachers day, teachers day 2019, teachers day date, indian express
Teachers’ Day 2019: Thank you teachers for being our guiding force. (Photo: Getty Images/Thinkstock)


Teachers’ Day 2019: Every year on September 5, Teachers’ Day is celebrated all across the country. As the name suggests, the day is dedicated to teachers and acknowledges their contribution in shaping one’s life. The day commemorates the birth anniversary of Dr Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, scholar, Bharat Ratna recipient, and the first Vice President and second President of independent India, who was born on September 5, 1888.

New Insight into How Much Atmosphere Mars Lost

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New Insight into How Much Atmosphere Mars Lost



NASA Research Gives 

New Insight into How Much 

Atmosphere Mars Lost

A key tracer used to estimate how much atmosphere Mars lost can change depending on the time of day and the surface temperature on the Red Planet, according to new observations by NASA-funded scientists. Previous measurements of this tracer – isotopes of oxygen – have disagreed significantly. An accurate measurement of this tracer is important to estimate how much atmosphere Mars once had before it was lost, which reveals whether Mars could have been habitable and what the conditions might have been like.
Mars is a cold, inhospitable desert today, but features like dry riverbeds and minerals that only form with liquid water indicate that long ago it had a thick atmosphere that retained enough heat for liquid water – a necessary ingredient for life – to flow on the surface. It appears that Mars lost much of its atmosphere over billions of years, transforming its climate from one that might have supported life into the desiccated and frozen environment of today, according to results from NASA missions such as MAVEN and Curiosity and going back to the Viking missions of 1976.
Conceptual image of Martian climate change
This artist’s concept depicts the early Martian environment (right) – believed to contain liquid water and a thicker atmosphere – versus the cold, dry environment seen at Mars today (left).
Credits: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
However, many mysteries about the Red Planet’s ancient atmosphere remain. “We know Mars had more atmosphere. We know it had flowing water. We do not have a good estimate for the conditions apart from that – how Earthlike was the Mars environment? For how long?” said Timothy Livengood of the University of Maryland, College Park and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Livengood is lead author of a paper on this research published online in Icarus August 1.
One way to estimate how thick the original atmosphere of Mars was is to look at isotopes of oxygen. Isotopes are versions of an element with different mass due to the number of neutrons in the atomic nucleus. Lighter isotopes escape to space faster than heavier isotopes, so the atmosphere that remains on the planet gets gradually enriched in the heavier isotope. In this case, Mars is enriched compared to Earth in the heavier isotope of oxygen, 18O, versus the lighter and much more common 16O. The measured relative amount of each isotope can be used to estimate how much more atmosphere there was on ancient Mars, in combination with an estimate for how much faster the lighter 16O escapes, and assuming that the relative amount of each isotope on Earth and Mars was once similar.
The problem is that measurements of the amount of 18O compared to 16O on Mars, the 18O/16O ratio, have not been consistent. Different missions measured different ratios, which results in different understandings of the ancient Martian atmosphere. The new result provides a possible way to resolve this discrepancy by showing that the ratio can change during the Martian day. “Previous measurements on Mars or from Earth have obtained a variety of different values for the isotope ratio,” said Livengood. “Ours are the first measurements to use a single method in a way that shows the ratio actually varying within a single day, rather than comparisons between independent devices. In our measurements, the isotope ratio varies from being about 9% depleted in heavy isotopes at noon on Mars to being about 8% enriched in heavy isotopes by about 1:30pm compared to the isotope ratios that are normal for Earth oxygen.”
This range of isotope ratios is consistent with the other reported measurements. “Our measurements suggest that the previous work all may have been done correctly but disagreed because this aspect of the atmosphere is more complex than we had realized,” said Livengood. “Depending where on Mars the measurement was made, and what time of day on Mars, it is possible to get different values.”
The team thinks the change in ratios during the day is a routine occurrence due to ground temperature, in which the isotopically heavier molecules would stick to cold surface grains at night more than the lighter isotopes, then are freed (thermally desorb) as the surface warms up during the day.
Since the Martian atmosphere is mostly carbon dioxide (CO2), what the team actually observed were oxygen isotopes attached to carbon atoms in the CO2 molecule. They made their observations of the Martian atmosphere with the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, using the Heterodyne Instrument for Planetary Winds and Composition developed at NASA Goddard. “While trying to understand the broad spread in estimated isotope ratios that we retrieved from the observations, we noticed that they were correlated with the surface temperature that we also obtained,” said Livengood. “That was the insight that set us on this path.”
The new work will help researchers refine their estimates of the ancient Martian atmosphere. Because the measurements can now be understood to be consistent with the results of such processes in other planets’ atmospheres, it means they are on the right track for understanding how the Martian climate changed. “It shows that the atmospheric loss was by processes that we more or less understand,” said Livengood. “Critical details remain to be worked out, but it means that we don’t need to invoke exotic processes that could have resulted in removing CO2 without changing the isotope ratios, or changing just some ratios in other elements.”
The research was funded by the former NASA Planetary Astronomy Program, now the NASA Solar System Observations Program. NASA is exploring our Solar System and beyond, uncovering worlds, stars, and cosmic mysteries near and far with our powerful fleet of space and ground-based missions.
Last Updated: Sept. 5, 2019
Editor: Bill Steigerwald

NASA Satellite Spots a Mystery That's Gone in a Flash | NASA

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NASA Satellite Spots a Mystery That's Gone in a Flash | NASA



NASA Satellite Spots a 

Mystery That's Gone in a Flash

This visible-light image of the Fireworks galaxy (NGC 6946) comes from the Digital Sky Survey, and is overlaid with data from NA
This visible-light image of the Fireworks galaxy (NGC 6946) comes from the Digital Sky Survey, and is overlaid with data from NASA's NuSTAR observatory (in blue and green).
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Pops of bright blue and green in this image of the Fireworks galaxy (NGC 6946) show the locations of extremely bright sources of X-ray light captured by NASA's NuSTAR space observatory. Generated by some of the most energetic processes in the universe, these X-ray sources are rare compared to the many visible light sources in the background image. A new study, published in the Astrophysical Journal, offers some possible explanations for the surprise appearance of the green source near the center of the galaxy, which came into view and disappeared in a matter of weeks.
The primary objective of the NuSTAR observations was to study the supernova — the explosion of a star much more massive than our Sun — that appears as a bright blue-green spot at upper right. These violent events can briefly produce enough visible light to outshine entire galaxies consisting of billions of stars. They also generate many of the chemical elements in our universe that are heavier than iron.  
The green blob near the bottom of the galaxy wasn't visible during the first NuSTAR observation but was burning bright at the start of a second observation 10 days later. NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory later observed that the source — known as an ultraluminous X-ray source, or ULX — had disappeared just as quickly. The object has since been named ULX-4 because it is the fourth ULX identified in this galaxy. No visible light was detected with the X-ray source, a fact that most likely rules out the possibility that it is also a supernova.
"Ten days is a really short amount of time for such a bright object to appear," said Hannah Earnshaw, a postdoctoral researcher at Caltech in Pasadena, California, and lead author on the new study. "Usually with NuSTAR, we observe more gradual changes over time, and we don't often observe a source multiple times in quick succession. In this instance, we were fortunate to catch a source changing extremely quickly, which is very exciting."
Possible Black Hole
The new study explores the possibility that the light came from a black hole consuming another object, such as a star. If an object gets too close to a black hole, gravity can pull that object apart, bringing the debris into a close orbit around the black hole. Material at the inner edge of this newly formed disk starts moving so fast that it heats up to millions of degrees and radiates X-rays. (The surface of the Sun, by comparison, is about 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit, or 5,500 degrees Celsius.)
Most ULXs are typically long-lived because they're created by a dense object, like a black hole, that "feeds" on the star for an extended period of time. Short-lived, or "transient," X-ray sources like ULX-4 are far more rare, so a single dramatic event — like a black hole quickly destroying a small star — might explain the observation.
However, ULX-4 might not be a one-off event, and the paper's authors explored other potential explanations for this object. One possibility: The source of ULX-4 could be a neutron star. Neutron stars are extremely dense objects formed from the explosion of a star that wasn't massive enough to form a black hole. With about the same mass as our Sun but packed into an object about the size of a large city, neutron stars can, like black holes, draw in material and create a fast-moving disk of debris. These can also generate slow-feeding ultraluminous X-ray sources, although the X-ray light is produced through slightly different processes than in ULXs created by black holes.
Neutron stars generate magnetic fields so strong they can create "columns" that channel material down to the surface, generating powerful X-rays in the process. But if the neutron star spins especially fast, those magnetic fields can create a barrier, making it impossible for material to reach the star's surface.
"It would kind of be like trying to jump onto a carousel that's spinning at thousands of miles per hour," said Earnshaw.
The barrier effect would prevent the star from being a bright source of X-rays except for those times when the magnetic barrier might waver briefly, allowing material to slip through and fall onto the neutron star's surface. This could be another possible explanation for the sudden appearance and disappearance of ULX-4. If the same source were to light up again, it might support this hypothesis.
"This result is a step towards understanding some of the rarer and more extreme cases in which matter accretes onto black holes or neutron stars," Earnshaw said.
NuSTAR is a Small Explorer mission led by Caltech and managed by JPL for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. NuSTAR was developed in partnership with the Danish Technical University and the Italian Space Agency (ASI). The spacecraft was built by Orbital Sciences Corp. in Dulles, Virginia. NuSTAR's mission operations center is at the University of California Berkeley, and the official data archive is at NASA's High Energy Astrophysics Science Archive Research Center. ASI provides the mission's ground station and a mirror archive. Caltech manages JPL for NASA.
To read more about NASA's NuSTAR mission, go here:
Calla Cofield
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
626-808-2469
calla.e.cofield@jpl.nasa.gov
2019-182
Last Updated: Sept. 4, 2019
Editor: Randal Jackson

An Infrared View of the M81 Galaxy | NASA

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An Infrared View of the M81 Galaxy | NASA



An Infrared View of the 

M81 Galaxy

M81 Galaxy
Located in the northern constellation of Ursa Major, which also includes the Big Dipper, nearby galaxy Messier 81 is easily visible through binoculars or a small telescope. M81 is located at a distance of 12 million light-years.
M81 was one of the first publicly released datasets soon after the launch of the Spitzer Space Telescope in August 2003. On the occasion of Spitzer's 16th anniversary this new image revisits this iconic object with extended observations and improved processing.
This Spitzer infrared image is a composite mosaic combining data from the Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) at wavelengths of 3.6/4.5 microns (blue/cyan) and 8 microns (green) with data from the Multiband Imaging Photometer (MIPS) at 24 microns (red).
The 3.6-micron near-infrared data (blue) traces the distribution of stars, although the Spitzer image is virtually unaffected by obscuring dust and reveals a very smooth stellar mass distribution, with the spiral arms relatively subdued.
As one moves to longer wavelengths, the spiral arms become the dominant feature of the galaxy. The 8-micron emission (green) is dominated by infrared light radiated by hot dust that has been heated by nearby luminous stars. Dust in the galaxy is bathed by ultraviolet and visible light from nearby stars. Upon absorbing an ultraviolet or visible-light photon, a dust grain is heated and re-emits the energy at longer infrared wavelengths. The dust particles are composed of silicates (chemically similar to beach sand), carbonaceous grains and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and trace the gas distribution in the galaxy. The well-mixed gas (which is best detected at radio wavelengths) and dust provide a reservoir of raw materials for future star formation.
Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Last Updated: Sept. 4, 2019
Editor: Yvette Smith

Los pueblos de las estepas llevaron las lenguas indoeuropeas al sur de Asia hace unos 3.500 años / Noticias / SINC

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Los pueblos de las estepas llevaron las lenguas indoeuropeas al sur de Asia hace unos 3.500 años / Noticias / SINC

SINC - Servicio de información y noticias científicas

Los pueblos de las estepas llevaron las lenguas indoeuropeas al sur de Asia hace unos 3.500 años



Un estudio genómico con participación española arroja luz sobre las rutas de dispersión de las lenguas indoeuropeas, la familia de lenguas más grande del mundo. El trabajo, que desentraña el complejo patrón de migraciones que han conformado la diversidad genética de Asia central y del subcontinente indio, revela que los pueblos de las estepas entre el Mar Caspio y el Mar Negro extendieron las lenguas a Asia.



SINC |  | 05 septiembre 2019 20:00
<p>Restos humanos de una tumba funeraria de la Edad del Bronce en Dali, Kazakshtan, en el 1700 a. C. / Michael Frachetti</p>
Restos humanos de una tumba funeraria de la Edad del Bronce en Dali, Kazakshtan, en el 1700 a. C. / Michael Frachetti
Los pueblos de las estepas situadas entre el Mar Caspio y el Mar Negro extendieron las lenguas indoeuropeas por el centro y sur de Asia hace entre 4.000 y 3.500 años, según un trabajo con participación del Instituto de Biología Evolutiva (IBE, un centro mixto del Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC) y la Universidad Pompeu Fabra (UPF).
Los descendientes de los pueblos Yamnaya de las estepas llegaron a la península ibérica a través de Europa a partir de hace 5.000 años 
Con 523 muestras prehistóricas, el trabajo, publicado en la revista Science, es el mayor estudio genómico antiguo realizado hasta la fecha. Gracias a una amplia colaboración interdisciplinar internacional, liderada desde la Universidad de Harvard (EE UU), los investigadores han contextualizado los resultados genómicos mediante registros arqueológicos, lingüísticos e históricos.
Según la investigación, los descendientes de los pueblos Yamnaya de las estepas, que llegaron a la península ibérica a través de Europa a partir de hace 5.000 años y propagaron el lenguaje indoeuropeo por el continente, también llevaron el sánscrito, la lengua clásica de la India, al sur de Asia. 
“Gracias a este estudio hemos podido desentrañar el complejo patrón de migraciones que han conformado la diversidad genética de Asia central y del subcontinente indio. Los resultados indican que los pueblos procedentes de las estepas pudieron contribuir a la decadencia de la llamada civilización del valle del Indo, que es junto a Egipto y Mesopotamia una de las tres grandes civilizaciones más antiguas de la humanidad”, explica Carles Lalueza-Fox, del IBE. 

Origen de las castas

Los investigadores han descubierto que las poblaciones actuales del norte del subcontinente indio presentan un porcentaje destacable de ascendencia esteparia. A excepción de una, todas estas poblaciones han sido históricamente grupos sacerdotales, como los brahmanes, una de las castas superiores del sistema social indio, que desde la antigüedad se encargan de custodiar los textos escritos en sánscrito.  
El hallazgo de que los brahmanes a menudo tienen mayor ascendencia esteparia que otros grupos en el sur de Asia proporciona a los autores del estudio un nuevo argumento a favor del origen estepario de las lenguas indoeuropeas en el sur de Asia.
Los hablantes actuales de las ramas indoiraní y báltico eslavas del indoeuropeo descienden de un subgrupo de pastores que migraron hacia Europa hace unos 5.000 años
“El hecho de que las castas superiores presenten mayor parentesco con los pueblos de las estepas indicaría que podrían haber sido estos los que instauraran esa estricta estratificación social”, añade Lalueza-Fox. 

Debate resuelto 

Durante décadas los especialistas han debatido acerca de cómo las lenguas indoeuropeas pudieron alcanzar regiones tan distantes y remotas entre sí. Existían dos hipótesis principales: que el indoeuropeo se propagó a través de los pastores nómadas de la estepa euroasiática o que, por el contrario, viajó con los grupos agricultores de la Península de Anatolia (actual Turquía) que migraron hacia el este y el oeste. 
Este nuevo estudio muestra, mediante datos genéticos, arqueológicos, lingüísticos e históricos, que los habitantes del sur de Asia apenas tienen parentesco con los agricultores provenientes de Anatolia.
“Podemos descartar una gran expansión en el sur de Asia de agricultores procedentes de Anatolia, que es la pieza central de la hipótesis de Anatolia, que proponía que las migraciones de pueblos del oeste llevaron a la región tanto la agricultura como las lenguas indoeuropeas”, comenta el investigador de la Universidad de Harvard, David Reich. 
Los investigadores han descubierto que los hablantes actuales de las ramas indoiraní y báltico eslavas del indoeuropeo descienden de un subgrupo de pastores que migraron hacia Europa hace casi 5.000 años y después expandieron desde allí en dirección oeste hacia el centro y sur de Asia en los siguientes 1.500 años.  
“Esto proporciona una explicación sencilla en términos de migraciones antiguas para los desconcertantes características lingüísticas comunes de estas dos ramas del indoeuropeo, que en la actualidad se encuentran separadas por amplias distancias geográficas”, concluye Reich.  
Mapa
Impacto de las migraciones de los pueblos Yamnaya. / Oliver Uberti y Science


Referencia bibliográfica:
Vagheesh M. Narasimhan et al. "The formation of human populations in South and Central Asia". Science. DOI: 10.1126/science.aat7487  

Explained: Chandrayaan-2 is 110th Moon mission, these are the previous lunar missions | Explained News, The Indian Express

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Explained: Chandrayaan-2 is 110th Moon mission, these are the previous lunar missions | Explained News, The Indian Express

Written by Amitabh Sinha |Published: September 6, 2019 1:36:54 pm

Explained: Chandrayaan-2 is 110th Moon mission, these are the previous lunar missions

Missions to moon slowly resumed in the 1990s but have picked up steam only in the last decade. The discovery of the presence of water on the moon, by Chandrayaan-1 mission in 2008, has been one of the prime reasons for a renewed interest in moon.

Explained: Chandrayaan-2 Moon landing today; here are the different kinds of moon missions
Missions to moon slowly resumed in the 1990s but have picked up steam only in the last decade.


Chandrayaan-2 is the 110th space mission to the moon, and the 11th this decade. A bulk of the moon missions, 90 out of the 109 so far, were sent between 1958 and 1976. There was a complete lull in moon exploration after that.

VIDEO | Chandrayaan-2 Moon landing: All your questions answered | Explained News, The Indian Express

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VIDEO | Chandrayaan-2 Moon landing: All your questions answered | Explained News, The Indian Express

By Explained Desk |New Delhi |Updated: September 6, 2019 1:31:22 pm

VIDEO | Chandrayaan-2 Moon landing: All your questions answered

WATCH VIDEO: ISRO's Chandrayaan-2 will land on the Moon between 1:30 am and 2:30 am on Saturday, September 06, 2019. We explain what happens before Chandrayaan-2 lands on the Moon and after that.



A month-and-half after it took off from the launch pad at Sriharikota, traversing a distance of over 3,84,000 km, Chandrayaan-2 is ready to face its moment of truth. If Chandrayaan-2 is successful, it will be India’s first soft landing on the moon’s surface. Only the US, the former USSR and China have been successful in landing humans or machines on the moon surface. (Click here to read LIVE Updates on the Chandrayaan-2 Moon Landing)

Explained: Milestone for ISRO’s Chandrayaan-2, Moon in sight | Explained News, The Indian Express

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Explained: Milestone for ISRO’s Chandrayaan-2, Moon in sight | Explained News, The Indian Express

Written by Amitabh Sinha |Pune |Published: August 21, 2019 12:55:36 pm



Explained: Milestone for ISRO’s Chandrayaan-2, Moon in sight

Chandrayaan-2 has just entered a lunar orbit. What makes it a milestone big enough for the ISRO head to announce it to the country? What are the next milestones coming up before the September 7 landing?

Explained: Milestone for ISRO's Chandrayaan-2, Moon in sight
ISRO Chairman K Sivan at a press conference where he announced Chandrayaan-2’s insertion to lunar orbit. (AP Photo)


On Tuesday, India’s Chandrayaan-2 mission crossed a major milestone on its journey towards the Moon, having entered a lunar orbit, almost exactly 30 days after being launched on July 22. The mission has several more milestones to cross before the Lander and Rover components of the spacecraft, called Vikram and Pragyaan respectively, make a soft landing on the Moon’s surface in the early hours of September 7. But Tuesday’s milestone was big enough for India Space Research Organisation (ISRO) Chairman K Sivan to call a press conference and inform the nation about the event.

Fact Check: Was the ‘loch ness monster’ a giant eel? Here’s what DNA study found | Explained News, The Indian Express

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Fact Check: Was the ‘loch ness monster’ a giant eel? Here’s what DNA study found | Explained News, The Indian Express

By Express News Service |New Delhi |Updated: September 6, 2019 10:55:43 am

Fact Check: Was the ‘loch ness monster’ a giant eel? Here’s what DNA study found

In the absence of any conclusive evidence, there have been various theories about whether “Nessie” ever existed, or whether it was an identifiable creature. On Thursday, scientists announced one more theory: the Loch Ness Monster may have been a giant eel.

The alleged monster, as sketched in 1941 by Arthur Grant. (Wikipedia)


Since the 1900s, the legend of the “Loch Ness Monster” has been the subject of much debate around the world. Did such a prehistoric creature really live in the waters of Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands?

‘As an actor, I am never satisfied’ | Lifestyle News, The Indian Express

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‘As an actor, I am never satisfied’ | Lifestyle News, The Indian Express

Written by Parul |Updated: September 6, 2019 4:00:01 am

‘As an actor, I am never satisfied’

Raghubir Yadav on how his 50-year journey through theatre and films, encouraging new talent and how quality not quantity is the need of the hour.

‘As an actor, I am never satisfied’
Yadav was in Chandigarh for ‘Cine Maestro: Shaping Future Filmmakers’, an inter-school filmmaking competition at Chitkara International School.


IT’S not the sky that Raghubir Yadav has his eyes set on, but it’s the ground. It’s where he searches for himself, where he believes there’s much to do and experience. The thirst and hunger to learn, says Yadav, never stops, as he savours life through theatre, films, and music.
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