Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts

Top 10 Facts About Milky Way Galaxy

So you’ve lived here all your life — in fact, everyone has — but what do you really know about the Milky Way galaxy? Sure, you know it’s a spiral, and it’s 100,000 light years across. Learn a lot more from here as i have presented only the essential things about the Milky Way Galaxy.

So let’s see if these really are Ten Things You Don’t Know About the Milky Way Galaxy.

 

1) It’s a barred spiral.

 

01-milkyway-galaxy-facts-Barred spiral

You might know that the Milky Way is a spiral galaxy, perhaps the most beautiful galaxy type. But you can know lot about them. They have a majestic arms sweeping out from a central hub or bulge of glowing stars. A lot of spirals have a weird feature: a rectangular block of stars at the center instead of a sphere, and the arms radiate away from the ends of the block. Astronomers call this block a bar, and, we have one.

In fact, ours is pretty big. At 27,000 light years end-to-end, it’s beefier than most bars. Of course, space is a rough neighborhood.

 

2) There’s a super massive black hole at its heart.

At the very center of the Galaxy, right at its very core, lies a monster: a super massive black hole.

We know it’s there due to the effect of its gravity. Stars very near the center — some only a few dozen billion kilometers out — orbit the center at fantastic speeds. They scream around their orbits at thousands of kilometers per second, and their phenomenal speed betrays the mass of the object to which they’re enthralled. Applying some fairly basic math, it’s possible to determine that the mass needed to accelerate the stars to those speeds must tip the cosmic scales at four million times the mass of the Sun! Yet in the images, nothing can be seen. So what can be as massive as 4,000,000 Suns and yet not emit any light?

Right. A black hole.

Even though it’s huge, bear in mind that the Galaxy itself is something like 200 billion solar masses strong, so in reality the black hole at the center is only a tiny fraction of the total mass of the Galaxy. And we’re in no danger of plunging into it: after all, it’s 250,000,000,000,000,000 kilometers away.

It’s thought now that a super massive black hole in the center of a galaxy forms along with the galaxy itself, and in facts winds blown outward as material falls in affects the formation of stars in the galaxy. So black holes may be dangerous, but it’s entirely possible the Sun’s eventual birth — and the Earth’s along with it — may have been lent a hand by the four million solar mass killer so far away.

3) It’s a cannibal.

01-milkyway-galaxy-facts-cannibal


Galaxies are big, and have lots of mass. If another, smaller galaxy passes too close by, the bigger galaxy can rip it to shreds and ingest its stars and gas.

The Milky Way is pretty, but it’s savage, too. It’s currently eating several other galaxies. They’ve been ripped into long, curving arcs of stars that orbit the center of the Milky Way. Eventually they’ll merge completely with us, and we’ll be a slightly larger galaxy. Ironically though, the galaxies add their mass to ours, making it more likely we’ll feed again. Eating only makes galaxies hungrier.

4) We live in a nice neighborhood…

 

The Milky Way is not alone in space. We’re part of a small group of nearby galaxies called — get ready to be shocked — the Local Group. We’re the heaviest guy on the block, and the Andromeda galaxy is maybe a bit less massive, though it’s actually spread out more. The Triangular galaxy is also a spiral, but not terribly big, and there are other assorted galaxies dotted here and there in the Group. All together, there are something like three dozen galaxies in the Local Group, with most being dinky dwarf galaxies that are incredibly faint and difficult to detect.

5) Suburbs.


The Local Group is small and cozy, and everyone makes sure their lawns are mowed and houses painted nicely. That’s because if you take the long view, we live in the suburbs. The big city in this picture is the Virgo Cluster, a huge collection of about 2000 galaxies, many of which are as large or larger than the Milky Way. It’s the nearest big cluster; the center of it is about 60 million light years away. We appear to be gravitationally bound to it; in other words, we’re a part of it, just far-flung. The total mass of the cluster may be as high as a quadrillion times the mass of the Sun.

6) You can only see 0.000003% percent of it.


When you got out on a dark night, you can see thousands of stars. But the Milky Way has two hundred billion stars in it. You’re only seeing a tiny tiny fraction of the number of stars tooling around the galaxy. In fact, with only a handful of exceptions, the most distant stars you can readily see are 1000 light years away. Worse, most stars are so faint that they are invisible much closer than that; the Sun is too dim to see from farther than about 60 light years away… and the Sun is pretty bright compared to most stars. So the little bubble of stars we can see around us is just a drop in the ocean of the Milky Way.

7) 90% of it is invisible.

01-milkyway-galaxy-facts-bulletcluster


When you look at the motions of the stars in our galaxy, you can apply some math and physics and determine how much mass the galaxy has (more mass means more gravity, which means stars will move faster under its influence). You can also count up the number of stars in the galaxy and figure out how much mass they have. Problem is, the two numbers don’t match: stars (and other visible things like gas and dust) make up only 10% of the mass of the galaxy. Where’s the other 90%?

Whatever it is, it has mass, but doesn’t glow. So we call it Dark Matter, for lack of a better term (and it’s actually pretty accurate). We know it’s not black holes, dead stars, ejected planets, cold gas — those have all been searched for, and marked off the list — and the candidates that remain get pretty weird (like WIMPs). But we know it’s real, and we know it’s out there. We just don’t know what it is. Smart people are trying to figure that out, and given the findings in recent years, I bet we’re less than a decade from their success.


8) Spiral arms are an illusion.


Well, they’re not an illusion per se, but the number of stars in the spiral arms of our galaxy isn’t really very different than the number between the arms! The arms are like cosmic traffic jams, regions where the local density is enhanced. Like a traffic jam on a highway, cars enter and leave the jam, but the jam itself stays. The arms have stars entering and leaving, but the arms themselves persist (that’s why they don’t wind up like twine on a spindle).

Just like on highways, too, there are fender benders. Giant gas clouds can collide in the arms, which makes them collapse and form stars. The vast majority of these stars are faint, low mass, and very long-lived, so they eventually wander out of the arms. But some rare stars are very massive, hot, and bright, and they illuminate the surrounding gas. These stars don’t live very long, and they die (bang!) before they can move out of the arms. Since the gas clouds in the arms light up this way, it makes the spiral arms more obvious.

We see the arms because the light is better there, not because that’s where all the stars are.

9) It’s seriously warped.

01-milkyway-galaxy-facts-warped


The Milky Way is a flat disk roughly 100,000 light years across and a few thousand light years thick (depending on how you measure it). It has the same proportion as a stack of four DVDs, if that helps.
Have you ever left a DVD out in the Sun? It can warp as it heats up, getting twisted (old vinyl LPs used to be very prone to this). The Milky Way has a similar warp!

The disk is bent, warped, probably due to the gravitational influence of a pair of orbiting satellite galaxies. One side of the disk is bent up, if you will, and the other down. In a sense, it’s like a ripple in the plane of the Milky Way. It’s not hard to spot in other galaxies; grab an image of the Andromeda galaxy and take a look. At first it’s hard to see, but if you cover the inner part you’ll suddenly notice the disk is flared up on the left and down on the right.

Andromeda has satellite galaxies too, and they warp its disk just like our satellite galaxies warp ours.
As far as I can tell, the warp doesn’t really affect us at all. It’s just a cool thing you may not know about the Milky Way. Hey, that would make a good blog entry!


10) We’re going to get to know the Andromeda galaxy a lot better.

 

01-milkyway-galaxy-facts-hst_antennae
Speaking of Andromeda, have you ever seen it in the sky? It’s visible to the naked eye on a clear, dark, moonless night (check your local listings). It’s faint, but big; it’s four or more degrees across, eight times the apparent size of the Moon on the sky.

If that doesn’t seem too big, then give it, oh, say, two billion years. Then you’ll have a much better view.

The Andromeda Galaxy and the Milky Way are approaching each other, two cosmic steam engines chugging down the tracks at each other at 200 kilometers per second. Remember when I said big galaxies eat small ones? Well, when two big galaxies smack into each other, you get real fireworks. Stars don’t physically collide; they’re way too small on this scale. But gas clouds can, and like I said before, when they do they form stars. So you get a burst of star formation, lighting up the two galaxies.

In the meantime, the mutual gravity of the two galaxies draw out long tendrils from the other, making weird, delicate arcs and filaments of stars and gas. It’s beautiful, really, but it indicates violence on an epic scale.

Eventually (it takes a few billion years), the two galaxies will merge, and will become, what, Milkomeda? Andromeda? Well, whatever, they form a giant elliptical galaxy when they finally settle down. In fact, the Sun will still be around when this happens; it won’t have yet become a red giant. Will our descendants witness the biggest collision in the history of the galaxy?

That’s cool to think about. Incidentally, I talk about this event a whole lot more, and in a lot more detail, in my upcoming book Death from the Skies! In case you forgot about that.

Until then, these Ten Things should keep you occupied. And of course, I only wanted to list ten things so I could give this post the cool title. But if you still want to find more interesting facts about the Milky Way visit bad astronomy site.

Lateral Thinking

01-lateralthinking-thought patterns

Question 1: Suresh wants to sell a nice collection of tamil song records that he has. He sold half of his records plus a half record more to Raja for 150 rupees and then he sold half of what was left and a half record more to Ramesh for 100 rupees. At this point Suresh had one record left. How many records did Suresh have originally?
Answer: 7 records.

 

Question 2: There is a bridge 4 kilometers long and strong enough to hold 10,000 kgs but nothing more. A fully loaded lorry weighing exactly 10,000 kgs drives on this bridge.  Halfway through a sparrow weighing 30 gms lands on the truck, yet the bridge doesnt collapse. How can that happen?
Answer: By the time the lorry comes to the middle of the bridge (2 kms) it would have already burnt more than 30 gms of fuel.

Lateral Thinking

01-lateralthinking-thought patterns

Question 1.) I buy it but I cannot use it. My friend who made it does not need it. The person who uses it is not aware of the fact that he is using it. What is it?

Answer: Coffin.

Question 2.) Greater than God,
More evil than the devil.
The poor have it,
The rich need it.
If you eat it, you’ll die.
What is it?

Answer: Nothing.
NOTHING is greater than God,
NOTHING is more evil than the devil.
The poor have NOTHING,
The rich need NOTHING.
If you eat NOTHING, you’ll die.

Top-10 World’s Best Reputed Universities 2011

01-THE_WORLD_university-RANKINGS

In March 2011, Times Higher Education[THE] released its first World Reputation Rankings. The rankings were sourced from a survey of more than 13,000 academics from 131 countries that nominated universities as being the best in their field in teaching and research.Four Australian universities are listed among the world’s top 100 most reputable universities: University of Queensland (UQ), the University of Melbourne, University of Sydney and The Australian National University.
A total of 15 Asian universities made their way into the world’s top 100 universities for reputation, with University of Tokyo rated 1st in Asia and 8th in the world, followed by Kyoto University (second best in Asia and 18th best in the world), National University of Singapore (third best in Asia and 27th worldwide).
The top 10 list are:
1. Harvard University
2. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
3. University of Cambridge
4. University of  California, Berkeley
5. Stanford University
6. University of Oxford
7. Princeton University
8. University of Tokyo
9. Yale University
10. California Institute of Technology

Webometrics Top 10 Ranking of World Universities 2011

webometrics

The Webometrics Ranking of World Universities, also known as Ranking Web of World Universities, is ranking system for the world’s universities based on a composite indicator that takes into account both the volume of the Web contents (number of web pages and files) and the visibility and impact of these web publications according to the number of external in links (site citations) they received. The ranking is published by the Cyber metrics Lab, a research group of the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) located in Madrid.

The Webometrics University Ranking is a ranking system based on university web presence, visibility and web access, This ranking system measures how strongly a university is present in the web by its own web domain, sub-pages, rich files, scholarly articles etc. The central hypothesis of this approach is that web presence is a reliable indicator of the global performance and prestige of the universities and as such, is an indirect way to measure all the university missions (teaching, research, transfer). Although the Web is universally recognized as the one of the most relevant tools for scholarly communication, it is still very rare these indicators are used for the evaluation of the scientific research and the academic performance of universities. Webometric indicators are provided to show the commitment of the institutions to Web publication.

Top universities are publishing millions of pages produced by dozens of departments and services, hundreds of research teams and thousands of scholars. Strong web presence informs of a wide variety of factors that are clearly correlated with the global quality of the institution: Widespread availability of computer resources available, global internet literacy, policies promoting democracy and freedom of speech, competition for international visibility or support of open access initiatives, among others.

Top-10 Lists are below:

1 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
2 Harvard University
3 Stanford University
4 University of California,Berkeley
5 Cornell University
6 University of Wisconsin Madison
7 University of Michigan
8 University of Minnesota
9 University of Washington
10 University of Pennsylvania

General Knowledge Objective Questions With Answer

01-general knowledge questions and answers

1.    Which continent has the highest number of countries?
A.    Africa
B.    Europe
C.    Asia
D.    South America

Answer A.    Africa

2. Which of the following country was the host of First Asian Yoga Championship held recently?
(A)Thailand
(B)Cambodia
(C)Vietnam
(D)Laos

Answer- (A)Thailand

3- What is the name of science through which you can modify the characteristics of an organism by modifying its DNA?
A.    Chemistry
B.    Genetic Engineering
C.    Biology
D.    Organic Science

Answer B.    Genetic Engineering

4. Which among the following is India’s largest indigenous Research and Production nuclear reactor?
(A)Apsara
(B)Dhruva
(C)Kamini
(D)CIRUS

Answer B)Dhruva

5- What was the basis of the National Calendar of India?
A.    Gregorian Calenda
B.    Saka Era
C.    Moghul Era
D.    None of the above

Answer B.    Saka Era

6 – Which is the Indian state with the second highest literacy rate?
A.    Lakshadweep
B.    Goa
C.    Kerala
D.    Mizoram

Answer D.    Mizoram

7- . Christine Lagarde, who recently headed the G-20 meeting of Finance Ministers and Governors of central Banks is Finance Minister of which among the following countries?
(A)Australia
(B)France
(C)Italy
(D)Germany

Answer (B)France

8 – When was the first Nobel prize awarded?
A.    1890
B.    1896
C.    1901
D.    1969

Answer C.    1901

9 -  In which year, Imperial Records Department (IRD) was established, which is now known as National Archives of India?
(A)1889
(B)1891
(C)1896
(D)1899

Answer (B)1891

10. Which among the following sports is NOT a part of the London Olympics?
(A)Taekwondo
(B)Baseball
(C)Table Tennis
(D)Triathlon

Answer (B)Baseball

11. Who among the following has been defeated by Saina Nehwal, who has won the Swiss Open Grand Prix Gold title recently, becoming the First Indian to do so?
(A)Ji Hyun Sung
(B) Wang Lin
(C)Kamilla Rytter Juhl
(D)Shinta Mulia Sari

Answer (A)Ji Hyun Sung

12. Where is going to be established the Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Education for Peace and Sustainable Development (MGIEP) , the latest & first Category-I institute of UNECO in South Asia?
(A)New Delhi
(B)Ahamedabad
(C)Mumbai
(D)Pune

Answer (A)New Delhi

13. Anant Pai, better known as ‘Uncle Pai’ , who recently died was the creator of which among the following comic series?
(A)Chacha Chaudhary
(B)Amar Chitra Katha
(C)Chandamama
(D)Indrajaal

Answer (B)Amar Chitra Katha

14 – What is the World’s largest island?
A.    Japan
B.    Singapore
C.    Hawaii
D.    Greenland

Answer D.   Greenland