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Showing posts from December, 2020
 The planet with the rain of stones and oceans of lava  The planet K2-141-B is raining rocks, the lava ocean is one kilometer deep and the wind is four times faster than the speed of sound. Astronomer T. Jian Newgen told "This is a very interesting planet with extreme weather, mineral rain, snow, and strong winds." "It's not a good place to live, but it's a lot of fun to study," says fellow professor Nicholas Cowan. A team of Canadian and Indian astronomers has published a new study of the planet K2-114-B. It is a rocky planet like our Earth. Planet K2-114-B is 202 light-years away from us and is present in a constellation called Aquarius. This destructive planet orbits its star so fast that it completes a year in seven hours. The star is an orange dwarf, meaning it has a much lower temperature than the sun and is so dim that it cannot be seen from Earth. Scientists at the Indian Institute of Technology in Calcutta, York University in Canada, and McGill Univ
Jupiter and Saturn will be closest in 800 years, and return of the miraculous star of Bethlehem Scientists say that on the night of December 21, the two major planets in the solar system, Jupiter and Saturn, will merge in such a way that they will look like a double planet to the human eye. This scene can be seen all over the world including Pakistan on the night of December 21 provided the weather is clear. And this time the reunion is taking place at a time when some believe it was the source of the bright light seen in the sky 2,000 years ago, now known as the Star of Bethlehem. The two planets will be seen very close on the night of December 21, completing their orbits close to each other. In the UK, too, star observers will keep a close eye on the weather to avoid astronomical disappointment so that they can see the scene with their own eyes. Caroline Crawford, of the Cambridge University's Institute of Astronomy, told that if it appeared in the evening, it was a sight to beho

Discovery of the Childhood house of Hazrat Jesus

 Is the cave in the city of Nazareth in Israel the house of Jesus? According to an archaeologist, there is a "strong possibility" that a house discovered during excavations in the city of Nazareth in northern Israel is the place where Jesus spent his childhood. Ken Dark, a professor at the University of Reading, has been researching a first-century cave discovered under a modern convent for the past 14 years. He said that archaeologists were first told about the house of Jesus, Mary and Joseph in the 19th century. However, in the 1930's, archaeologists rejected the idea. The site was almost forgotten, but in 2006 Professor Dark launched a program to re-research it. He said: 'I did not go to Nazareth to find Jesus' house. I actually went to research the history of the city as a Byzantine Christian shrine. He said that the ancient basement-like cave is under a Byzantine-era church, which goes under the Sisters of Nazareth Convent. He says: "We know from written