if sun didnt rise essay in marathi
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मी त्यांच्या सत्रासाठी अलार्म सेट करणार्यापैकी एक नाही. मी जेव्हा नैसर्गिकरित्या जागरुक असताना मला जबरदस्तीने सक्ती करते तेव्हा मी जास्त काळ झोपतो हे लक्षात आले आहे आता कित्येक महिने, या नैसर्गिक प्रबोधनासाठी उत्तेजनांच्या कतारच्या समोरच्या शेवटी उमेदवार, क्षितिजाशी संबंधित सूर्यची स्थिती होती. मी नॉन-गेकसाठी शेवटचे भाषांतर करू: 'सूर्य मला जाग येत आहेत.' सूर्य माझी आई आहे खरेतर, माझी आई माझी आई आहे, परंतु काही क्षणांसाठी माझ्या बरोबर राहा. पहा, सूर्याविना आम्ही इथेही एकमेकांना प्रश्न विचारत नाही - विचार प्रक्षोभक, शंका नाही. विचार करणे माझ्यासाठी प्रेमाची गोष्ट आहे आणि माझा विश्वास आहे की मी त्यासाठी विश्वाचा त्याग करतो. कोट्यवधी वर्षांपूर्वीही आपण अस्तित्वात असू शकू, लाखो तारांचा मृत्यू झाला. ते आमच्यासाठी मरण पावले. आण्विक संयुगाच्या प्रक्रियेचा उपयोग करून त्या तारेने जीवनसत्त्वांचा पाया घातला - ऑक्सिजन, कार्बन, नायट्रोजन इ. - हायड्रोजनपासून. ते मरण पावले म्हणून, ते अस्तित्वहीन मध्ये विस्फोट, जेणेकरून तरुण तारे - आमच्या सूर्य सारख्या - त्यांच्या पुनर्नवीनीकरण गुंता पासून जन्मले जाऊ शकते. तर, मला त्यास रिफ्रेश द्या. विश्वाची आई माझी आई आणि सूर्याबरोबरच माझी आई आहे. तर, आपण पाहत आहात? माझे दिवस वेळेवर जाग येणे आणि माझे नेहमीचे काम करण्याबद्दल खरे नाही. मी 24 तासांच्या अंतराळांवर काम करणारी हालचाल एक अर्थहीन प्रीसेट यादी नाही. प्रत्यक्षात, हे त्यापेक्षा बरेच काही आहे. विश्वाच्या वैभवाचे प्रशंसा करण्यासाठी मी दररोज काही क्षण घालवतो. आम्ही त्यात आहोत तेव्हा आमच्यामध्ये असल्याने विश्वाचा आभारी आहे. मी जीवनाचा आभारी आहे म्हणून मला धन्यवाद देतो. माझे दिवस अक्षरशः सूर्य आधी सुरवात न करता सुरू नाही सूर्य एका दिवसात उदय होत नसल्यास काय होईल?
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This is in English you can translate in marathi using google translator.
I’ve never been one of those who set alarms for their mornings to come. I’ve noticed I sleep a greater duration when I force myself awake than when I wake naturally. For many months now, the candidate at the front end, of the queue of stimuli for this natural awakening, was the position of the sun relative to the horizontal. Let me translate that last one for the non-geek: ‘The sun wakes me up.’
The sun is my mother. Actually, my mother is my mother, but bear with me for a few moments. See, without the sun we wouldn’t even be here asking each other questions – thought provoking, no doubt. Thinking is an activity that’s dearest to me and I believe I owe it to the universe to think for it. Billions of years before we even possibly could exist, millions of stars died. They died for us. Those stars, using the process of nuclear fusion, created the building blocks of life – oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, etc. – from hydrogen. As they died, they exploded into non-existence, so that younger stars – like our sun – could be born from their recycled guts. So, let me rephrase that. The universe is my mother, in addition to my mother… and the sun.
So, you see? My day is not really about waking on time and doing my usual chores. It’s not a meaningless preset list of movements that I act out at 24 hour intervals. In reality, it’s much more than that. I take a few moments daily to admire the majesty of the universe. I thank the universe for being in us while we’re in it. I thank the sun for giving me the life I so cherish. My day literally doesn’t start without the sun rising before me. What then would happen if the sun just didn’t rise one day?
The earth is spinning at the rate of 24 hours per day. So, two corresponding moments in consecutive days are separated by 1440 minutes or 86400 seconds. The mean radius of the earth is 6371 kilometres, which brings its circumference to about 40030km. So, that’s about 1670km every hour or 27.8km every minute or 463 metres every second. Now, that’s a lot of speed.
That might seem like a small number but to put it in perspective, assuming the earth is a perfect frictionless sphere, a frictionless spherical object will be on the diametrically opposite end of the earth on the circle of the latitude of its original position, by the end of this operation. Things with frictional forces that overcome that acceleration will stay where they are, so your house and your correctly braked cars are safe. Your fortress made out of playing cards, though, not so much. I’m sure children will notice out of the ordinary things like their toys not occupying their right place. Or maybe it’s just me. Every thing that can potentially move would have to be oriented in the north-south direction to minimise the chaos.
Objects that have started to move will keep moving, so those that have been stopped at sufficiently low speeds won’t pose real threats. That which isn’t stopped will snowball until it hits something with all the relative force it has accumulated in the time it moved. Not to be alarming, but the theoretical maximum speed anything can pick up, is at the very end, when an object at the equator essentially moves at the normal rotating linear velocity of the equator which is 463 metres per second. In the end, it doesn’t matter if the earth stops quickly or gradually; there’ll always be something around to kill you at 20 times the speed of death.
Okay! So let’s think what happens to the rest of us, who weren’t splattered by an unorganised horde of random lorries that surprisingly didn’t encounter blockades. Well, the part of the earth in complete darkness would simply be the same as the flat-earth apologist within us speculated in our lovely essay earlier. Those who have the sun stuck at noon will have it the worst. With no nights to take away the heat, the temperature will only increase in the logarithmic fashion. On the bright side (get it?!), you can get out whenever you want and get your desired tan.
Until that happens, know that if you’re alive and capable of asking yourself the question, the sun did rise…
I’ve never been one of those who set alarms for their mornings to come. I’ve noticed I sleep a greater duration when I force myself awake than when I wake naturally. For many months now, the candidate at the front end, of the queue of stimuli for this natural awakening, was the position of the sun relative to the horizontal. Let me translate that last one for the non-geek: ‘The sun wakes me up.’
The sun is my mother. Actually, my mother is my mother, but bear with me for a few moments. See, without the sun we wouldn’t even be here asking each other questions – thought provoking, no doubt. Thinking is an activity that’s dearest to me and I believe I owe it to the universe to think for it. Billions of years before we even possibly could exist, millions of stars died. They died for us. Those stars, using the process of nuclear fusion, created the building blocks of life – oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, etc. – from hydrogen. As they died, they exploded into non-existence, so that younger stars – like our sun – could be born from their recycled guts. So, let me rephrase that. The universe is my mother, in addition to my mother… and the sun.
So, you see? My day is not really about waking on time and doing my usual chores. It’s not a meaningless preset list of movements that I act out at 24 hour intervals. In reality, it’s much more than that. I take a few moments daily to admire the majesty of the universe. I thank the universe for being in us while we’re in it. I thank the sun for giving me the life I so cherish. My day literally doesn’t start without the sun rising before me. What then would happen if the sun just didn’t rise one day?
The earth is spinning at the rate of 24 hours per day. So, two corresponding moments in consecutive days are separated by 1440 minutes or 86400 seconds. The mean radius of the earth is 6371 kilometres, which brings its circumference to about 40030km. So, that’s about 1670km every hour or 27.8km every minute or 463 metres every second. Now, that’s a lot of speed.
That might seem like a small number but to put it in perspective, assuming the earth is a perfect frictionless sphere, a frictionless spherical object will be on the diametrically opposite end of the earth on the circle of the latitude of its original position, by the end of this operation. Things with frictional forces that overcome that acceleration will stay where they are, so your house and your correctly braked cars are safe. Your fortress made out of playing cards, though, not so much. I’m sure children will notice out of the ordinary things like their toys not occupying their right place. Or maybe it’s just me. Every thing that can potentially move would have to be oriented in the north-south direction to minimise the chaos.
Objects that have started to move will keep moving, so those that have been stopped at sufficiently low speeds won’t pose real threats. That which isn’t stopped will snowball until it hits something with all the relative force it has accumulated in the time it moved. Not to be alarming, but the theoretical maximum speed anything can pick up, is at the very end, when an object at the equator essentially moves at the normal rotating linear velocity of the equator which is 463 metres per second. In the end, it doesn’t matter if the earth stops quickly or gradually; there’ll always be something around to kill you at 20 times the speed of death.
Okay! So let’s think what happens to the rest of us, who weren’t splattered by an unorganised horde of random lorries that surprisingly didn’t encounter blockades. Well, the part of the earth in complete darkness would simply be the same as the flat-earth apologist within us speculated in our lovely essay earlier. Those who have the sun stuck at noon will have it the worst. With no nights to take away the heat, the temperature will only increase in the logarithmic fashion. On the bright side (get it?!), you can get out whenever you want and get your desired tan.
Until that happens, know that if you’re alive and capable of asking yourself the question, the sun did rise…
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