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Sunday, April 4, 2010

Amazing 40 Country Facts!

1. 10 percent of the Russian government's income comes from the sale of vodka

2. 80% of 10 year old girls in the U.S. go on a diet.

3. About 1 in 30 people in the U.S. are in jail, on probation, or on parole.

4. About 10% of U.S. households pay their bills in cash.

5. America once issued a 5-cent bill!

6. Antarctica is the only land on our planet that is not owned by any country.

7. At their closest point, the Russian and U.S. borders are less than two miles apart.

8. Austria was the first country to use postcards.

9. Before toilet paper was invented, French royalty wiped their bottoms with fine linen.

10. Each year 96 billion pounds of food is wasted in the U.S.

11. Every 45 seconds, a house catches on fire in the United States!

12. Florida has more tornados per square mile than any other state.

13. Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada has the most bars per capita than anywhere else in the world.

14. Honolulu is the only place in the United States that has a royal palace!

15. Honolulu is the only place in the United States that has a royal palace.

16. Iceland has no railway system or army!

17. Iceland has the most Internet users per capita of any country in the world with over 86 percent of people using the Web, compared with only 69 percent of Americans.

18. If China imported just 10% of its rice needs- the price on the world market would increase by 80%.

19. In 1956, 80% of all U.S. households had a refrigerator, but only 8% of British households had one!

20. In 39 of the 50 U.S. states, the travel industry is the largest single employer

21. In Brazil, Christmas is celebrated with fireworks.

22. In England, the Speaker of the House is not allowed to speak.

23. In India, Pajamas are accepted as standard daytime wearing apparel.

24. In India, people are legally allowed to marry a dog!

25. In Kentucky, 50% of the people who get married for the first time are teenagers.

26. In Mexico, the Tooth Fairy is known as the 'Tooth Mouse'.

27. In New York City, approximately 1,600 people are bitten by other humans every year.

28. In the U.S., for every dollar you spend on gasoline 27 cents of it is in taxes.

29. In the United States, deaf people have safer driving records than hearing people!

30. In Tibet it is considered good manners to stick out your tongue at someone.

31. In what country will you find the most Universities? India.

32. India has a Bill of Rights for cows.

33. Israel is one quarter the size of the state of Maine.

34. Istanbul, Turkey is the only city in the world located on two continents.

35. It costs about 3 cents to make a $1 bill in the United States.

36. It is illegal for tourists to enter Mexico with more than 2 CD's!

37. Jacksonville, Florida, has the largest total area of any city in the United States.

38. Last 2 European countries to let women vote: Switzerland (1971) and Leichtenstein (1984).

39. Manhattan Island of New York City was purchased for $24 from the Algonquian Indians in 1624!

40. Mexico City is sinking at a rate of 18 inches per year!

Facts about Diamonds:


  • The name Diamond is derived from the Greek word, Adamas. This means the unconquerable.
  • Did you know that most diamonds that are found are not suitable to be used as jewelry?
  • Diamonds are also the hardest substance on this earth and also the most sought after!
  • Diamonds are always valued in terms of the 4 Cs. This is the cut, color, clarity and the carat of the diamond; it is said that the concept of the 4 Cs were introduced in 1939.
  • Diamonds are found in various colors such as blue and pink, which are very rare and yellow and brown, which are amongst the most common types available. In its purest state, diamonds are colorless and brilliant in appearance.
  • In the year, 1994, Pauline Willemse cut a diamonds that was 50 times smaller than the head of a ballpoint pen. This was the world’s smallest diamond.
  • If one has to produce a single one-carat diamond, around 250 tons of earth will have to be mined.
  • Diamonds were formed billions of years ago; under extreme heat and deep within the earth’s crust. They come to the surface when there is any form of volcanic eruptions. Such activities bring the diamonds closer to the surface of the earth.
  • Diamonds are one such gemstones that are composed of only one chemical element-carbon.
  • The cut of the diamond is very crucial as it is the cut that defines the beauty of the diamond.
  • As per the old beliefs and customs, it is believed that the engagement diamond ring was worn on the third finger of the left hand because the ancient Egyptians believed the vein directly connected to the heart.
  • The largest diamond was known as the Star of Africa (Cullinan). This adorned the scepter of King Edward VII of England and is now at the Tower of London.
  • Diamonds also have the highest melting point of any natural substance.
  • Amongst the other stories that are associated with diamonds, one such fact about these precious stones exists that the wearer gets more courage and good fortune and diamonds also act as a shield against all evils.
  • Diamonds are rock hard and almost fire proof. Therefore, in order to make a diamond burn, it needs to be heated to 1292 degrees Fahrenheit.
  • The first diamond ring (for engagement) was gifted by Archduke Maximillian of Austria to Mary of Burgundy in the year, 1477.

Facts About Solar System Planets

Mercury

  • Distance from Sun: 36 million miles
  • Diameter: 3,032 miles
  • Average Temperature: 333° F
  • Surface: Silicate rock
  • Revolution: 88 days
  • Day: 175.94 days
  • Number of moons: 0
  • Neat Fact: Closest planet to the Sun.

Venus

  • Distance from Sun: 67 million miles
  • Diameter: 7,521 miles
  • Average Temperature: 867° F
  • Surface: Silicate rock
  • Revolution: 224.7 days
  • Day: 116.75 days
  • Number of moons: 0
  • Neat Fact: Rotates in the opposite direction from the other planets.

Earth

  • Distance from Sun: 93 million miles
  • Diameter: 7,926 miles
  • Average Temperature: 59° F
  • Surface: Water, basalt, and granite rock
  • Revolution: 365.25 days
  • Day: 24 hours
  • Number of moons: 1
  • Neat Fact: Travels around the Sun at a speed of >66,000 miles per hour.

Mars

  • Distance from Sun: 142 million miles
  • Diameter: 4,213 miles
  • Average Temperature: -81° F
  • Surface: iron-rich basaltic rich
  • Revolution: 687 days
  • Day: 24 hours 39 minutes 35 seconds
  • Number of moons: 2
  • Neat Fact: The largest volcano in the Solar System is on Mars. It is called Olympus Mons.

Jupiter

  • Distance from Sun: 484 million miles
  • Diameter: 88,732 miles
  • Average Temperature: -162º F
  • Surface: Liquid hydrogen
  • Revolution: 11.9 years
  • Day: 9 hours 55 minutes 30 seconds
  • Number of moons: 63
  • Neat Fact: The four largest moons were found by Galileo in 1601; the others were discovered in 2003.

Saturn

  • Distance from Sun: 887 million miles
  • Diameter: 74,975 miles
  • Average Temperature: -218º F
  • Surface: Liquid hydrogen
  • Revolution: 29.5 years
  • Day: 10 hours 39 minutes 23 seconds
  • Number of moons: 47
  • Neat Fact: Galileo discovered the rings around Saturn with a simple early telescope.

Uranus

  • Distance from Sun: 1.8 billion miles
  • Diameter: 31,763 miles
  • Average Temperature: -323º F
  • Surface: Liquid hydrogen and helium
  • Revolution: 84 years
  • Day: 17 hours 14 minutes 23 seconds
  • Number of moons: 27
  • Neat Fact: Its north pole stays dark for 42 years at a time.

Neptune

  • Distance from Sun: 2.8 billion miles
  • Diameter: 30,603 miles
  • Average Temperature: -330º F
  • Surface: Liquid hydrogen and helium
  • Revolution: 164.8 years
  • Day: 16 days 6 hours 37 minutes
  • Number of moons: 13
  • Neat Fact: Neptune can have winds up to 2400 miles per second.

Pluto

  • Distance from Sun: 3.6 billion miles
  • Diameter: 1,485 miles
  • Average Temperature: -369º F
  • Surface: Rock and frozen gases
  • Revolution: 247.7 years
  • Day: 6 days 9 hours 17 minutes
  • Number of moons: 3
  • Neat Fact: Some scientists do not consider Pluto to be an actual planet.

More Planet Facts

  • Largest Planet: Jupiter
  • Smallest Planet: Pluto
  • Fasting Orbiting Planet: Mercury
  • Slowest Orbiting Planet: Pluto
  • Hottest Planet: Venus
  • Coldest Planet: Pluto
  • Shortest Day: Jupiter
  • Longest Day: Mercury

Solar Energy


General facts about Solar Energy

  • Solar Energy is better for the environment than traditional forms of energy.
  • Solar energy has many uses such as electricity production and heating of water through photovoltaic cells and directly for drying clothes.
  • Solar energy can also be used to heat swimming pools, power cars, for attic fans, calculators and other small appliances. It produces lighting for indoors or outdoors.
  • You can even cook food with solar energy.
  • Solar Energy is becoming more and more popular. The worldwide demand for Solar Energy is currently greater than supply.

Facts about Solar Energy systems:

  • A home solar system is typically made up of solar panels, an inverter, a battery, a charge controller, wiring and support structure.
  • A 1-kilowatt home solar system takes about 1-2 days to install and costs around US$10,000, but can vary greatly and does not take into account any incentives offered by the government.
  • A 1-kilowatt home solar system consists of about 10-12 solar panels and requires about 100 square feet of installation area.
  • A 1 kilowatt home solar system will generate approximately 1,600 kilowatt hours per year in a sunny climate (receiving 5.5 hours of sunshine per day) and approximately 750 kilowatt hours per year in a cloudy climate (receiving 2.5 hours of sunshine per day).
  • A 1-kilowatt home solar system will prevent approximately 170 lbs. of coal from being burned, 300 lbs of CO2 from being released into the atmosphere and 105 gallons of water from being consumed each month!
  • About 40 solar cells are usually combined into a solar panel and around 10-12 panels mounted in an array facing due North to receive maximum sunlight.
  • The system usually comes with a 5-year warranty, although the solar panels are warranted for 20.
  • Relying on the battery back up, a solar energy system can provide electricity 24x7, even on cloudy days and at night.
  • Solar panels come in various colours.Solar energy can be collected and stored in batteries, reflected, insulated, absorbed and transmitted.

30 Interesting Facts about Human Brain


Brain is the central organ of the human body. It is extremely complex and sophisticated. The functions of the brain were found by the ancient Egyptians and Greeks in 400 BC. It was Hippocrates who first discovered that brain played an important role in sensation and intelligence. Nowadays, everyone understand the importance of having the brain, but most of us don’t know much about it, so here are some interesting facts for you

1) There are no pain receptors in the brain, so the brain can feel no pain.

2) The human brain is the fattest organ in the body and may consists of at least 60% fat.

3) Neurons develop at the rate of 250,000 neurons per minute during early pregnancy.

4) Humans continue to make new neurons throughout life in response to mental activity.

5) Alcohol interferes with brain processes by weakening connections between neurons.

6) Altitude makes the brain see strange visions - Many religions involve special visions that occurred at great heights. For example, Moses encountered a voice emanating from a burning bush on Mount Sinai and Muhammad was visited by an angel on Mount Hira. Similar phenomena are reported by mountain climbers, but they don’t think it’s very mystical. Many of the effects are attributable to the reduced supply of oxygen to the brain. At 8,000ft or higher, some mountaineers report perceiving unseen companions, seeing light emanating from themselves or others, seeing a second body like their own, and suddenly feeling emotions such as fear. Oxygen deprivation is likely to interfere with brain regions active in visual and face processing, and in emotional events.

7) Reading aloud and talking often to a young child promotes brain development.

8 ) Information travels at different speeds within different types of neurons. Not all neurons are the same. There are a few different types within the body and transmission along these different kinds can be as slow as 0.5 meters/sec or as fast as 120 meters/sec.

9) The capacity for such emotions as joy, happiness, fear, and shyness are already developed at birth. The specific type of nurturing a child receives shapes how these emotions are developed.

10) The left side of your brain (left hemisphere) controls the right side of your body; and, the right side of your brain (right hemisphere) controls the left side of your body.

11) Children who learn two languages before the age of five alters the brain structure and adults have a much denser gray matter.

12) Information can be processed as slowly as 0.5 meters/sec or as fast as 120 meters/sec (about 268 miles/hr).

13) While awake, your brain generates between 10 and 23 watts of power–or enough energy to power a light bulb.

14) The old adage of humans only using 10% of their brain is not true. Every part of the brain has a known function.

15) A study of one million students in New York showed thatstudents who ate lunches that did not include artificial flavors, preservatives, and dyes did 14% better on IQ tests than students who ate lunches with these additives.

16) For years, scientists believed that tinnitus was due to a function within the mechanics of the ear, but newer evidence shows that it is actually a function of the brain.

17) Every time you recall a memory or have a new thought, you are creating a new connection in your brain.

18) Memories triggered by scent have a stronger emotional connection, therefore appear more intense than other memory triggers.

19) Each time we blink, our brain kicks in and keeps things illuminated so the whole world doesn’t go dark each time we blink (about 20,000 times a day).

20) Laughing at a joke is no simple task as it requires activity in five different areas of the brain.

21) The average number of thoughts that humans are believed to experience each day is 70,000.

22) There are two different schools of thought as to why we dream: the physiological school, and the psychological school. While many theories have been proposed, not single consensus has emerged as to why we dream. Some researchers suggest that dreams serve no real purpose, while other believe that dreaming is essential to mental, emotional and physical well-being. One theory for dreaming suggests dreams serve to clean up clutter from the mind.

23) The Hypothalamus part of the brain regulates body temperature much like a thermostat. The hypothalamus knows what temperature your body should be (about 98.6 Fahrenheit or 37 Celsius), and if your body is too hot, the hypothalamus tells it to sweat. If you’re too cold, the hypothalamus makes you start shivering. Shivering and sweating helps get your body’s temperature back to normal.

24) Approximately 85,000 neocortical neurons are lost each day in your brain. Fortunately, his goes unnoticed due to the built-in redundancies and the fact that even after three years this loss adds up to less than 1% of the total.

25) Differences in brain weight and size do not equal differences in mental ability. The weight of Albert Einstein’s brain was 1,230 grams that is less than an average weight of the human brain.

26) A living brain is so soft you could cut it with a table knife.

27) There are about 100,000 miles of blood vessels in the brain.

28) London taxi drivers ,famous for knowing all the London streets by heart, have a larger than normal hippocampus, especially the drivers who have been on the job longest. The study suggests that as people memorize more and more information, this part of their brain continues to grow.

29) The brain can live for 4 to 6 minutes without oxygen, and then it begins to die. No oxygen for 5 to 10 minutes will result in permanent brain damage.

30) Our brain often fools us. It often perceives things differently from the reality. Look at those pictures. Square A and B are actually the same shade of gray

Fun and Interesting Facts About Moon

  • The average distance between Earth and its moon is about 238,900 miles (384,000 kilometers).
  • The diameter of the moon is 2,160 miles (3,476 kilometers).
  • The mass of moon is 7.15 x 1022 kg. It is about one-eightieth that of the Earth.
  • The surface gravity of the moon is only one-sixth that of Earth.
  • The time taken by moon to complete one rotation and one revolution is the same - about 27.3 days. This is why, from Earth, we always see the same side of the moon.
  • The moon orbits Earth at an average speed of 2,300 miles an hour (3,700 kilometers an hour).
  • The moon's gravitational pull on Earth is the reason behind the phenomenon of rise and fall of ocean tides.
  • There is no water and no air on moon.
  • From earth, only 59 percent of moon's surface is visible.
  • The dark spots that can be seen on moon are nothing, but craters filled with basalt, a very dense material.
  • The moon is the only extraterrestrial body to have been visited by humans. It is also the only body from which samples have been taken.
  • The first artificial object to impact the lunar surface was Luna 2.
  • Luna 3 (built by the Soviet Union) was the first space craft to send back pictures from the moon, in October 1959.
  • There is no global magnetic field on moon.
  • In 1966, Luna 9 became the first spacecraft to perform a successful lunar soft landing.
  • The first unmanned vehicle to orbit the Moon was sent in 1966, under the name Luna 10.
  • Unlike the moons (natural satellites) of other planets, the moon of the Earth has no proper English name, other than "the Moon".
  • The surface of the Moon is covered with craters, basins, and cratered highlands, called terrae.
  • The soil that covers the Moon is composed of rock fragments and fine dust grains. It is known by the name of 'regolith'.
  • The density of moon is 3.34 g/cm3.
  • The temperature on moon ranges from -171 deg C to 111 deg C.
  • The total atmospheric mass of moon is less than 104 kg.
  • Lunar eclipses occur near a full moon, when the Earth is between Sun and Moon.
  • During its brightest phase i.e. at "full moon", moon has an apparent magnitude of about −12.6.
  • Moon is neither round, nor spherical. Rather, it has the shape of an egg