About Meteoroids- Kartik JNV Jhajjar
Video by Kartik about Aliens- JNV Jhajjar
Mysterious Aliens video by Lokesh JNV Jhajjar
Mind Boggling Mysteries
UFO
If we study the history of the sightings related to UFO, we would come across many things that indicate a whole world of unknown truths. Still, nothing can be said for certain. Examining all the evidence, there are numerous accounts of sightings, photographs, etc. But are these reliable? Can you distinguish between fact and fiction?
Suggested Links
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/aliens/
http://www.nwlink.com/~ufocntr/
http://www.pbs.org/lifebeyondearth/index.html
Paavni
Grade : 5
St. Mark's Sr. Sec. Public School, Janakpuri,
New Delhi, India
DO YOU KNOW !!!
Are we in a special place?
OUR entire cosmology is built on the idea of our own unremarkableness: that we’re nothing special and neither is Earth.
The idea dates back to the Renaissance, and Copernicus’s discovery that Earth revolves around the sun. Suddenly we were no longer at the centre of Creation.
What makes monster stars?
THE first signs a storm was brewing came in 2010. That was when a team of astronomers found four gargantuan stars in the Tarantula nebula, a star-forming area in our neighbouring galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud. The largest tipped the scales at 265 times the mass of the sun. It has potential consequences for everything from black hole abundance to the likelihood of alien life.
Is our solar system normal?
ON THE face of it, it’s a biggie: fully 1.4 times the diameter of Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system. But it is nothing unusual in itself. Discovered in 2016, KELT-11b at first seemed to be just one of many large “hot Jupiters” orbiting close to their star, causing a large drop in light whenever they cross its face.
Asmi JNV Jhajjar reciting a poem about galaxies
How will it all end?
HALFWAY across the universe, a star lies dead. You write it off as routine, the sort of thing that happens a million times in this crummy neighbourhood. Something like this unfolded in March 2017 when, on a routine patrol of the night sky, David Sand at the University of Arizona came across something new. At first glance, it was just another type Ia supernova, the fiery end of an over-bloated white dwarf star.
Tusharika Roy
Grade : 5
St. Mark's Sr. Sec. Public School, Janakpuri, New Delhi , India
Resources-Images from Pixabay