Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Google Doodle celebrates spectacular meteor shower

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Aug, 2014 07:25 AM
    The search engine Google has created an interactive doodle to celebrate the Perseid meteor shower that occurs every August.
     
    The spectacular annual celestial phenomenon began Saturday and is expected to finish Wednesday while reaching its peak Tuesday.
     
    It is caused when the massive Swift-Tuttle comet loses parts of its celestial body as it enters into the inner solar system.
     
    With clear skies, it is common to see more than 100 meteors an hour.
     
    The Perseids get its name as the meteors look like they originate from the constellation Perseus.
     
    Comet Swift-Tuttle last passed earth in 1992 and travels in a 133 year orbit around the sun.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    LG to ship 60 mn phones in 2014

    LG to ship 60 mn phones in 2014
    South Korean firm LG Electronics will ship 60 million smartphones in 2014, with good sales of its flagship G3 model pushing up the numbers...

    LG to ship 60 mn phones in 2014

    Student files action lawsuit against Facebook

    Student files action lawsuit against Facebook
    An Austrian law student has filed a class action lawsuit at a commercial court in Vienna against Facebook over privacy violations....

    Student files action lawsuit against Facebook

    USB drives are unsafe, security lab finds

    USB drives are unsafe, security lab finds
    An infected USB drive could then run an unknown programme, redirect traffic or run a virus file at computer start-up, Berlin-based Security Research Labs reported....

    USB drives are unsafe, security lab finds

    Headband to save drowning kids

    Headband to save drowning kids
    For swimmers, the device sits around the head and for non-swimmers, it could be worn on the wrist....

    Headband to save drowning kids

    Can tiny ants save us from global warming?

    Can tiny ants save us from global warming?
    The sheer biological mass of ants working in rhythm could have removed significant quantities of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere since the insects...

    Can tiny ants save us from global warming?

    Warring Giants: Microsoft sues Samsung for breach of trust

    Warring Giants: Microsoft sues Samsung for breach of trust
     Microsoft filed a case against Samsung Electronics in a US court over breach of contract. The lawsuit accuses the South Korean company of not paying for...

    Warring Giants: Microsoft sues Samsung for breach of trust