Sunday 29 December 2013

Telenor info

  Telenor

  1. Telenor SMS bundle

Dial *345*015# and get 300 SMS for 5 day at Rs.6+tax.

  2. To retrieve MMS directly on your handset.please download your MMS settings by sending SMS to 131 with keyword MMS.

  3. Daily 50MB bundle 12Rs mei laine k liye *345*932# aur monthly 1000MB bundle 250Rs mei laine kliye *345*935# milain.

  4. Internet balance check karne k liye *999# milain,khud-ba-khud yahi bundle hasil karnay kay liye Y se reply karein.

  5. Abhi *345*934# milain aur hasil karain 250 MB internet sirf 35 Rupay main puray haftay ke liye.

  6. Offer hasil karnay liye *930# dial kar k apna manpasand bundle activate karein.

  7. Send pp to 345 to check your package.

Mobilink info

  1. Determining Package: Send blank message to 3838. If your phone can't send blank message then send a dot (.).

  2. Ab Rs 250 mein puray mahinay internet istemaal karen (1 GB!!) Activation k liye *345*935# dial kare.

  4. Kia apka matluba number OFF hai? Parayshan na hun,NotifyMe service khud apko itila krayga jab bhi number ON hoga.Sub likh k 6528 pe SMS krain @ Rs0.50+T Rozana

  5. Mobilink laya Fastest Internet puray 3 din sirf Rs 18 main (300 MB). *114*8# milayen. To check your remaining status dial *114*8*2#

  6. Ab Mobilink ki shandar SMS offers ke liye *445# milayen aur apni pasand ki offer muntakhib karain.

  7. Apni pasand ki shandar voice offers ke liye *444# milaen.

  8. *600# milakar Zero Balance Call k zariye balance na hone ki surat main kisi number pe 5 Missed Calls aur 2 SMS kijye @ Rs.2.25+T haftawar.

  9. Good Morning Internet! subha 8:00 se dupehr 2:00 bajay tak 100 MB sirf Rs.4 main. Subscription ke liye *114*14# milaen. 24 ghantay baad auto-subscription.

  10. Mobilink laya puray din ka internet sirf Rs 9.99 rozana main(100 MB). *114*1# milayen.
To unsubscribe from daily internet bundle dial *114*1*4#. To check the remaining daily Mbs dial *114*1*2#
  11. Mobilink laya Fastest Internet puray 7 din sirf Rs 34.99 main(500 MB). *114*7# milaen.

  12. Raseed SMS! Ab ap pechlay din per ki gai Calls ,SMS,Internet aur degaar services k charges kisi waqat bhi hasil ker saktay hain. 7050 pe khali SMS muft bhajain

  13. Now you can get information regarding your package plan free of cost. Send EMPTY sms to 3838. Thank You

  14. 150 minutes in Rs 18 for 24 hours dial *114*4#

15. To subscribe Har 30 Sec Offer, Please dial *750##. Charges: 50 paisa+Tax/30 sec for all local numbers with subscription fee of
Rs 10+tax monthly (Call setup Fee 10 paisa+T)
   Dear Customer, to confirm for status in Har 30 Second offer, dial *750*2#

16. *180# milaye aur hasil karen Missed Call Alert@Rs15+t/month

17. Get call center services by texting your query to 3111

18. To receive Jazz Connect settings via sms simply type Internet & send to 7342. The SMS is charged Rs.0.01

19. To receive MMS settings via sms simply type MMS & send to 7342. Charges Rs.0.01. Thank you

Sunday 8 December 2013

Black hole

What is a black hole?Credit: NASA, S. Gezari, and J. Guillochon       

Black holes are the remnants of very massive stars with gravity so strong that not even light can escape.


Black holes may be among the strangest – and most commonly misunderstood – objects in our universe. The remnants of the most massive stars, they sit at the limit of our understanding of physics. They can contain several times the mass of our sun in a space no larger than a city. With gravity so intense that not even light can escape their surfaces, black holes can teach us about the absolute extremes in the cosmos and the very structure of space itself.

Artist’s rendition of a black hole drawing gas off a nearby star. Credit: NASA E/PO, Sonoma State University, Aurore Simonnet

Conceptually, black holes aren’t all that complicated. They are nothing more than extremely dense cores of once-massive stars. Most stars, like our sun, end their lives peacefully by gently blowing their outer layers into space. But stars exceeding about eight times the mass of the sun take another, more dramatic, path.

These stars die when they can no longer fuse atomic nuclei in their core. It’s not that they run out of fuel, per se. Rather, once the star has a core of iron, fusing together atoms to make new elements actually costs the star energy. Lacking an energy source, the star can’t hold itself up against the relentless struggle with gravity. The outer layers of the star come crashing down.

As several octillion tons of gas come hurdling down, the star’s core undergoes a drastic change and becomes resilient to further compression. The infalling gas hits the now-hardened core and rebounds. The rapid gas compression sets off one last wave of uncontrolled nuclear fusion. The star, now wildly out of balance, explodes. The resulting supernova can outshine an entire galaxy and can be seen from across the universe.

A supernova remnant, N49, located 160,000 light-years away in the Large Magellenic Cloud—a satellite galaxy of the Milky Way. At roughly 5000 years old, the supernova most likely left behind a compact neutron star in its wake. This composite image shows x-rays (purple), infrared (red) and visible (white, yellow) light. X-ray: NASA/CXC/Caltech/S.Kulkarni et al.; Optical: NASA/STScI/UIUC/Y.H.Chu & R.Williams et al.; IR: NASA/JPL-Caltech/R.Gehrz et al.

In the supernova’s wake, the core remains. This dense soup of subatomic particles has a couple of options at this point. For a star with less mass than 20 suns, the core holds together as a neutron star. But for the real stellar heavyweights, the core transforms into a truly exotic object. A black hole is born.

Stars thrive in a precarious balance. Gravity wants to pull the star together, internal pressure wants to tear it apart. The most drastic changes happen when one of these forces gets the upper hand. Above a core mass of a few suns, there is no known source of pressure that can balance gravity. The stellar remnant collapses upon itself.

Squeezing all that mass into a smaller and smaller volume makes the gravity at the dead star’s surface skyrocket. Ratcheting up the gravity makes it increasingly difficult for anything to escape. Get the gravity high enough – about 30 thousand times what we feel here on Earth – and some truly bizarre side effects pop up.

This computer simulation shows a star being gravitationally torn apart by a nearby black hole. Long streams of superheated gas mark out the star’s final journey. The infalling gas piles up in a disk around the black hole (upper left). Credit: NASA, S. Gezari (The Johns Hopkins University), and J. Guillochon (University of California, Santa Cruz)

Throw a ball up into the air, and eventually it stops, turns around, and comes back to your hand. Throw the ball harder, it goes higher – but still falls back down. Throw the ball hard enough and the ball can escape Earth’s gravity. That point-of-no-return is called the “escape velocity”. It’s different for every planet, star, and comet. Earth’s escape velocity is about 40,000 km/hr. For the sun, it’s over 2 million km/hr!. On a very small asteroid, jumping too high might accidentally launch you into orbit.

On a black hole, however, the escape velocity is greater than the speed of light!

Since nothing can go that fast, then nothing – not even light itself – can get up enough speed to escape a black hole’s surface. No type of radiation—radio waves, UV, infrared – can emanate from a black hole. No information at all can ever leave. The universe has drawn a curtain around whatever remains of these stellar behemoths and so we can’t directly study them. All we can do is conjecture.

The black hole itself is defined by a volume of space delineated by an “event horizon”. The event horizon invisibly marks off the boundary where the escape velocity is exactly equal to the speed of light. Outside of the horizon, your spaceship has at least a theoretical chance of making it home. Crossing that line sets you on a one-way journey to whatever sits inside.

One way astronomers locate black holes is finding them in orbit around other stars. When this happens, gas is sucked off the star and spirals down a disk through the event horizon. The gas in the disk is heated to millions of degrees and emits powerful x-rays. The result is what astronomer’s call an “x-ray binary”, show here in this artists’s rendition. Credit: ESA, NASA, and Felix Mirabel

What sits within the event horizon is a complete mystery. Is there still an object sitting in the center, some shadow of a once brilliant stellar core? Or does nothing stop the gravity from crushing the nuclei to a single point, possibly even puncturing the fabric of space-time? Our lack of understanding of such extreme environments and the veil of ignorance that cloaks these creatures gives the imagination room to run wild. Visions of tunnels to other dimensions, parallel universes, and even distant times are rampant. But the only honest answer to the question “what lies beyond the event horizon?” is a simple “we don’t know!”

The bottom line is that black holes are the burying grounds of extremely massive stars. Following a supernova explosion, the massive core is left behind. Lacking a suitable balancing force, gravity pulls the core together to a point where the escape velocity exceeds the speed of light. From this point on, no light – and no information of any kind – can radiate into space. All that remains is a perfectly black void where once a mighty star stood.

Friday 22 November 2013

Is carbon an element or a compound


Chemistry:  An atom capable of independent existence, or group of atoms bonded by covalent bond is called a molecule. Eg He, Ne, H2, O2, C, H2O, S, H2O, H2SO4 etc. If in a molecule all the atoms are chemically identical, then it is called an element. Eg He, Ne, H2, C, S etc. If a molecule is made up of different atoms then its called a compound. Eg H2O, H2SO4 and NaOH etc. Metals are elements since here all the atoms are chemically identical. Eg Na, K, Rb etc but not molecules because they don't have covalent bonds. Nor their atoms are capable of independent existence. They have a special type of bonding called metallic bond. Group of ions (bonded by ionic bond) are called ionic compounds, eg NaCl, MgCl2 etc. They are compounds because the atoms (ions) are not same but not molecules because they don't have covalent bonds. Atoms are the building blocks of all matter, mixture, molecules, elements and compounds. And molecules are the building blocks of elements and compounds. If we say H2 is a compound then carbon will also be a compound which is not the case