Connecting To The Server To Fetch The WebPage Elements!!....
MXPlank.com
MXMail
Submit Research Thesis
Electronics - MicroControllers
Contact us
QuantumDDX.com
Toggle navigation
Home
Quantum Physics
Cosmology
AstroPhysics
Genetics
Origins Of Life
Quantum Biology
Nuclear Physics
Science-Casts
POD Archive
About Us
ScienceCasts
Earth's Magnetosphere
Elucidating The Black Holes
The Surprising Power of a Solar Storm
Weird Planets
A Close Encounter With Jupiter
Ancient remnants deep in the Kuiper belt
The Super Fluid Core Of A Dead Neutron Star
Massive Cloud On Collision Course With Milky Way
Mysterious Objects at the Edge of the Electromagnetic Spectrum
Big Mystery in the Perseus Cluster
Spacecraft discovers thousands of doomed comets
Close Encounter with Enceladus
Amazing Moons
The Sounds Of The InterStellar Space
Search The Site
GO
Fractal Wormhole Blue Vortex Lights
Please click on the 'PLAY' icon in the video if it does not start plaing automatically in a few seconds
This view points out important features in the image, such as the ring's inner and outer edges. Astronomers used the
This new NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image shows ghostly green filaments, lying within galaxy 2MASX J15100402+0740370.
If placed in the middle of our solar system, the star VY Canis Majoris would engulf all the planets out to Saturn's orbit. This monster, appropriately called a red hypergiant, is as bright as 300,000 Suns.
On 17 August 2017, the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) and the Virgo Interferometer both detected gravitational waves from the collision between two neutron stars.
This image shows NGC 121, a globular cluster in the constellation of Tucana (The Toucan)
A never-before-seen view of the turbulent heart of our Milky Way galaxy provided by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope and its companion Great Observatories - the Spitzer Space Telescope and the Chandra X-ray Observatory