In this Space and universe video documentary, we are going to present you the exoplanets which are not suitable for living in our world i.e., exoplanets from hell. Watch this space and universe documentary to understand about hot or planets which are not suitable for sustaining life.

Watch this Planets from hell video documentary to learn everything about the different planets in the universe, life in other planets in the universe, is life exist only on earth, etc.

Watch Exoplanets From Hell - Life In Other Planets In The Universe (Documentary) here:

On Sunday, January 19, SpaceX successfully completed an in-flight test of Crew Dragon’s launch escape capabilities from Launch Complex 39A (LC-39A) at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. This test, which did not have NASA astronauts onboard the spacecraft, demonstrated Crew Dragon’s ability to reliably carry crew to safety in the unlikely event of an emergency on ascent.

Falcon 9 and Dragon lifted off at 10:30 a.m. EST, or 15:30 UTC, with the abort sequence initiating approximately one and a half minutes into flight. Crew Dragon's eight SuperDraco engines powered the spacecraft away from Falcon 9 at speeds of over 400 mph. Following separation, Dragon's trunk was released and the spacecraft's parachutes were deployed, first the two drogue parachutes followed by the four upgraded Mark III parachutes. Dragon safely splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean and teams successfully recovered the spacecraft onto SpaceX's recovery vessel.

You can watch a replay of launch below:

Image credit: cratermoon

Einstein's Blackboard is the actual blackboard which physicist Albert Einstein used on May 16, 1931 during his lectures while visiting the University of Oxford in England. The writing is actually Einstein's and has been preserved to this day. The blackboard is one of the most iconic objects in the collection of the Museum of the History of Science in Oxford.

The lecture in which the blackboard was used was the second of three, delivered at Rhodes House in South Parks Road. Einstein's visit to give the Rhodes Lectures, and also to receive an honorary Doctor of Science degree from Oxford University on May 23, 1931, was hosted by the physicist Frederick Lindemann. Einstein's first lecture was on relativity, the second on cosmology, and the third on unified field theory. All the lectures were delivered in German. A brief report of the second lecture was given in The Times and in Nature. A summary of all three lectures can be found in the Archives of the Oxford Museum for the History of Science.

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