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 5 Amazing facts in world


1.Panda shaped solar plant


China is the global leader when it comes to producing solar energy, and the country is showing no signs of slowing its progress  in renewable energy.
With a total installed solar capacity of 78 gigawatts at the end of 2016, China led all other countries in installed capacity. Through the first half of 2017, the country is on a record pace for solar installations, with 24 gigawatts of capacity produced, according to Bloomber
China added 34.5 gigawatts of solar capacity throughout all of 2016, the International Energy Agency as per report
The Panda Power Plant, with a capacity of 100 megawatts, was connected to  grid in late June in the hills of Datong, Shanxi province. The plant, location is in northeastern China, spans 248 acres and is in the testing phase and is producing 50 megawatts of energy. It is expected to be fully integrated.
2.Hidden Beach-
Playa del Amor, commonly known as the Hidden Beach, is a feature of one of the Marieta Islands, located some 22 nautical miles west of Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, at the mouth of Banderas Bay. It looks like out of a fantasy novel: a wide, sandy cavern with the blue waters of the  rushing in. The Marieta Islands is a group of islands formed by underwater volcano eruptions. They are natural, but it was something other than the volcanic activity that brought the burrowed beach to light.
It is rumored that the hole that created the Hidden Beach was a result of  bombings. The Marieta Islands have always been completely uninhabited, making them ideal sites for military testing by the Mexican government. Beginning in the early 1900s, weapons and artillery were tested on the Marieta Islands, a safe distance from Mexican  but not so safe for Marieta topography. Test bombs are the known cause for many caves and rock formations on the island, possibly  the Hidden Beach.
3.Bermuda Triangle

Bermuda Triangle, section of the North Atlantic Ocean off North America in which more than 50 ships and 20 airplanes are said to have mysteriously disappeared. The area, whose boundaries are not universally agreed upon, has a vaguely triangular shape marked by the Atlantic coast of the Florida panhandle (in the United States), Bermuda, and the Greater Antilles.
4.airplane food taste so bad?


It's a question every traveler has asked themselves at some point: Why does airplane food taste so bad? No matter what it is—fish, chicken, even pasta—every meal served in the air seems to taste undeniably worse than its on-the-ground counterpart. To get to the bottom of this dilemma, we consulted Grant Mickels, the executive chef for culinary development of Lufthansa's LSG Sky Chefs—who had some surprising revelations. Namely: That the food's not really the problem here.

“At 35,000 feet, the first thing that goes is your sense of taste," explained Mickels. He explained that the quality of the food and its ingredients isn't to blame.t. It's even been tested: The Fraunhofer Institute, a research  based in Germany, did a study on why a dish that would be delicious in a fine dining restaurant be, as Mickels put it, “so dull in the air.”
5.The World’s First Cell Phone-



The world’s first cell phone was launched in 1983. It was the Motorola DynaTAC 800x. It was priced at around $4,000 and lasted for 30 minutes of talk time before dying. It was also about the size of a foot long sub from Subway.
Despite the phone’s large size, it was still considered to be the telephone ever made. For the first time in history, a human being could call someone without the constraints of wires or portable phone holders.

Prior to the release of the Motorola DynaTAC 8000x, several major developments had paved the way for the first cell phone.

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