Aujourd'hui, it is the 27th of April, 2017.Today was a very engrossing, intriguing and electric day.It was merely enervating though.Explicitly, I went on a peregrination; an exceedingly long one.It covered the meagre interesting parts of the Silicon Valley of India; Bangalore.Primarily,I visited the Visvesvaraya Industrial and Technological Museum.It was astounding! The museum was substantial to attract a fastidious horde of science enthusiasts.It was disunited into four (and additional diminutives) halls.They consisted of the Engine hall;the ElectroTechnic Hall;the Fun Science Hall and the BEL Hall of Electronics.I cherished the ElectroTechnic Hall.It was just stupendous.I spent an eternity there.It housed everything I always fancied from corona discharge tubes to Tesla coils to Plasma globes to Volta's first battery and an infinite more.I reckon it is one of the best places I have sojourned.There was one particular section of the electrotechnic which caused me to over-excite as well as make me utterly angry.First the good part : for the first time ever, I found-the greatest inventor the world has ever seen-Nikola Tesla's name publicly displayed.Gadzooks, there was an intact section dedicated to the great genius.There were Tesla coils, plasma globes, alternating current generators and the most amazing rotating egg experiment.I gawped at the machines that I wished to see for eternity.The electrical fields rushed through my body and heart's pulses were forthwith replaced by the electrical impulses.Truly, only a scientist would know the feeling.Now, the bad part : entry was restricted to the Tesla section.I was beastly apoplectic but I kept tranquil and heavily resolved that I can detain my eagerness; for one day, those machines will be in my own laboratory.I also adored the engine hall where a sundry discrete engines were stowed.Another debilitating exhibit was a full scale model of the Wright brothers' aeroplane! The other halls were also absorbing and had their own hordes.Forbye, we also visited the Vidhana Soudha (the government of Karnataka's headquarters) and Bangalore's High Court.The Vidhana Soudha was colossal and I only hoped I could scrutinise it deeply but unfortunately, entry was restricted to government officials.Subsequently, we visited the huge government aquarium and later the Hindustan Aeronautics Limited Aerospace Museum.The latter part was very enthralling and I was fascinated by HAL's history and the substantial models put out for display.I scrutinised the dainty engines and motors and when it was time, sat back in the car and headed to the Bull temple.The shree big bull temple -or simply the bull temple- is located away from the electronic city's hustle and bustle.The deity (the bull) was carved marvellously and Brobdingnagian.I forgot to mention that I had purchased an amazing book in the museum; it is about the mathematical genius Srinivasa Ramanujan and the title is his name itself.I found the book very intriguing and by far, the best biographical writing about the prodigy (I have read a lot of his biographies).Once I reached home, I seated myself comfortably and began reading the riveting tale.
That's all I have for today! and customarily, I leave you with a quote;
That's all I have for today! and customarily, I leave you with a quote;
"An equation has no meaning to me unless it expresses a thought of god"-Srinivasa Ramanujan