Thursday, June 27, 2019

Cosmic Waves Discovery Could Unlock Mysteries Of Intergalactic Space


,br> Scientists were celebrating a groundbreaking astronomical discovery Thursday that they say could pave the way for mapping the outer reaches of the universe. An Australian-led team of international astronomers have determined for the first time the precise source of a powerful, one-off burst of cosmic radio waves. They have pinpointed it to a massive galaxy billions of light years away, with properties that upend what scientists previously thought they knew about the formation of mysterious fast radio bursts (FRBs).

Saturday, June 15, 2019

Sunday, June 9, 2019

Soul and Substance - A Motivational Poem



The marooned boat of life in river
Floats without being aware
As fishes of hope swim around
Taking their noble stand.

In boat of life’s twist and turn
In right direction battle has to be won
As tide changes now and then
Be aware how fish wins.

As like in your life of child and youth
River flows through plains and forest
So to capture the life of substance
In your soul find its presence

French Open 2019 : Men's Final



In Sunday’s French Open final, Austria’s Dominic Thiem threw every shot he had at the Spaniard. All it did was incite the beast that is Nadal, who proved, with a 6-3, 5-7, 6-1, 6-1 triumph, that he remains peerless on the red clay of Roland Garros, where his match record is 93-2 to win his 12th French Open title.

French Open 2019 : Women's Final



Australian Ashleigh Barty has beaten Czech teenager Marketa Vondrousova in the French Open final to win her first Grand Slam singles title 6-1 6-3.

Wednesday, June 5, 2019

Black Hole Mystery Dating Back 40 Years Solved By "Best Ever" Simulation



Scientists on Thursday unveiled the most detailed simulation of a black hole yet, solving a mystery dating back more than four decades over how the star-devouring monsters consume matter. Coming fresh on the heels of the first ever photo of one of the giant objects, which are scattered across the Universe, astrophysicists are now several steps closer to understanding how they form and develop.A team of astrophysicists from Northwestern University, Oxford University, and the University of Amsterdam, used graphical processing units to crunch large sets of data and simulate how black holes interact with their accretion disks.