♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ परम पिता परमात्मा कण कण तिम्रो बास, गर्ने गराउने प्रभु तिमी सब कुछ तिम्रो साथ । अंग संग देखी तिमीलाई अवतार गर्छ अरदास, राजाको अधिराज तिमी म दासको पनि दास । ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ तूही निरंकार... मेँ तेरी शरणाँ... मैनु बख्श लो....... While receiving God-Knowledge, a seeker pledges to follow five principles given as: 1. One should consider all one's worldly assets - physical, mental and material as ultimately belonging to God and one may utilized them as a trustee and should not be proud of these possessions. 2. One should not feel proud of one's religion, caste, colour and creed as also the status (Ashram); one should love every one as a fellow human being. 3. One should not hate or criticize others on account of their diet and dress which may be different from his or her own. 4. One must not leave one's hearth and home, become recluse or ascetic and be a burden on others; one must earn one's own livelihood through honest hard work and fulfil one's responsibilities as a family person. 5. One must not divulge to others the divine knowledge as revealed by the True Master, without a word from him. This will save him or her from the pride of being in possession of God-Knowledge.

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Sunday, March 13, 2011

How Thermos keeps coffee Hot or Lemonade Cool...

According to Prevost's Theory of Exchange, the colder of two bodies always absorbs heat waves until both bodies are the same temperature. By this theory, it would be natural for scalding coffee or ice-cold lemonade in a thermos to lose heat or gain it respectively. But a thermos is designed to cut down the exchange of heat between the inside and the outside of the bottle by hampering the three ways in which heat can travel: Conduction, Convection and Radiation.

A standard thermos, made of metal or plastic, has an inner container consisting of a double glass bottle. A near vacuum exists between the two layers of glass, and the lips of the bottles are sealed by melting the edges together. Glass is used because it is a poor conductor of heat, which means that in glass heat does not pass rapidly from molecule to molecule as it does in a better heat conductor such as copper. The stopper and pads that hold the bottle in place in the outer container are generally made of cork, also a very poor conductor of heat. The near vacuum between the two layers of glass limits the possibility of heat escaping from or penetrating the thermos by convection - the transmission of heat by means of the movement of heated matter from one place to another is a liquid or gas. Since, however, heat can travel through a vacuum by radiation, the facing surfaces of glass are coated with a silvery solution of aluminium which reflects heat waves and does not absorb them. 
Sir James Dewar invented the thermos or "Vacuum bottle" in 1885 to keep heat from the liquid gas with which he was experimenting. The happy byproduct of his ingenuity has made our life pleasurable when we are on a picnic or long distance travel.

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