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Facts

Facts & Guides Facts publishes substantive, sourced, surprising facts across science, history, geography, culture, technology, and the natural world. The section covers science facts (physics, biology, astronomy, neuroscience, psychology), historical facts (Indian history, world history, ancient civilizations, modern history, lesser-known historical figures and events), geography facts about India’s states, world geography, oceans, mountains, climate and ecology, cultural facts about traditions and customs across India and globally, technology and engineering facts, sports facts, animal kingdom facts, mathematical and statistical facts, and “did you know” deep-dives into everyday objects, phenomena, and ideas. What separates this section from typical fact listicles: every fact is sourced, every fact gets context, and Indian and global balance is intentional. A meaningful portion of coverage focuses on India’s contributions to science, mathematics, art, philosophy, and history — areas where global education systems often underrepresent Indian achievement. Coverage of the global picture includes India woven naturally throughout.

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Interesting Facts — Sourced Science, History, Geography and Cultural Knowledge

Interesting facts on Facts & Guides are different from typical online trivia. Every fact is sourced to a credible reference — peer-reviewed studies, recognized historical works, official statistics, established institutions. The Facts section publishes substantive, sourced, surprising facts across science, history, geography, culture, technology and the natural world, written for curious readers who want real knowledge rather than viral misinformation.

What Facts coverage includes

The Facts section covers six core areas: science facts sourced from peer-reviewed research across physics, biology, astronomy, neuroscience and psychology, Indian history facts covering ancient civilizations through modern history with cited sources, world geography facts about countries, oceans, mountains and climate, cultural facts about traditions and customs, did you know facts that go beyond clickbait into substantive context, and technology and mathematics facts with explanations rather than just claims. Every fact comes with the context that makes it meaningful.

Science facts sourced from credible research

Physics and astronomy

Physics facts coverage explains foundational concepts and recent discoveries with sources. The speed of light in vacuum is exactly 299,792,458 meters per second — a defined value rather than measured. The universe is approximately 13.8 billion years old based on cosmic microwave background measurements by the Planck mission. Quantum mechanics, relativity, the standard model, and current research from the Large Hadron Collider and astronomical observatories are explained at accessible depth without sacrificing accuracy.

Biology and neuroscience

Biology and neuroscience facts include the human body — 206 bones in adults (270 at birth, fusing during growth), approximately 86 billion neurons in the brain (Herculano-Houzel, 2009), 37 trillion cells in the average adult body. Coverage explains evolution, genetics, the microbiome, cognitive science research, and emerging fields like longevity research with appropriate scientific caution about what is established versus speculative.

Psychology and behavioral science

Psychology facts cover memory, attention, decision-making, emotional regulation, social behavior, and the consistent research findings versus the "facts" popular psychology articles often misrepresent. Coverage explains foundational research (Milgram, Stanford Prison, attribution theory, behavioral economics) honestly, including replication issues with some classic studies. Indian and global perspectives are both represented.

Indian history facts — ancient through modern

Ancient and medieval India

Indian history facts coverage spans the Indus Valley Civilization, Vedic period, Mauryan and Gupta empires, Chola dynasty achievements, Vijayanagara, Mughal era, and regional kingdoms across India. Coverage cites recognized historians (Romila Thapar, Irfan Habib, R.S. Sharma, K.A. Nilakanta Sastri) and primary sources rather than viral WhatsApp claims. The contributions of Indian mathematicians, astronomers, philosophers and scientists across centuries are documented with appropriate sources.

Modern India and independence movement

Modern Indian history facts cover the British colonial period, the independence movement, partition, the formation of the Indian republic, the integration of princely states, and post-independence development. Coverage references recognized historical sources and government records rather than partisan retellings. Lesser-known historical figures and events that deserve attention are highlighted alongside the famous ones.

World geography facts

Countries, continents and oceans

World geography facts include essential reference points: Russia is the largest country by area (17.1 million km²), Vatican City is the smallest (0.49 km²), the Pacific Ocean is the largest ocean covering 30% of Earth's surface, the Sahara is the largest hot desert at 9.2 million km², Mount Everest is 8,848.86 meters tall (revised 2020), the Mariana Trench is approximately 11,000 meters deep. Each fact comes with context about why the geography matters.

India's geography

India geography facts include the country's 28 states and 8 union territories, the Indian coastline of approximately 7,500 km, the Himalayas marking the northern boundary, the Western and Eastern Ghats, river systems (Ganga, Yamuna, Brahmaputra, Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri), and Mawsynram in Meghalaya being the world's wettest place. Climate zones, biodiversity hotspots (Western Ghats, Northeast India), and the role of monsoons in Indian agriculture and life are explained with appropriate context.

Did you know facts — beyond clickbait

Did you know facts on Facts & Guides go beyond surface-level trivia. India recognizes 22 official languages but the 2011 Census recorded over 19,500 dialects across the country. The concept of zero as a numeral was developed in ancient India by Brahmagupta. India is home to the world's largest postal network (155,000+ post offices) and the world's largest film industry by output. Each fact gets explained, sourced and contextualized — not just listed.

Cultural and historical context

Cultural facts cover traditions, customs, festivals and historical context across India and globally. Why does India celebrate certain festivals on specific dates, what is the historical origin of various Indian practices, how have cultural exchanges across centuries shaped current traditions — covered with respect for the cultures involved and sourced from cultural historians and anthropologists. Global cultural facts cover analogous traditions across other civilizations with India's contributions to global culture documented prominently.

How Facts are sourced and verified

Every fact published has a clear source. Scientific facts link to peer-reviewed publications or recognized institutional documentation. Historical facts cite recognized historians and primary sources. Geographic facts use official data from World Bank, UN, geographical surveys and government agencies. Statistical facts use original publications, not aggregator sites. When sources disagree, this is noted. When evidence is preliminary, this is stated. The goal is curiosity rewarded properly — not viral content optimized for shares.

Why Indian achievements get specific focus

A meaningful portion of Facts coverage focuses on India's contributions to science, mathematics, philosophy, astronomy and history — areas where global education systems often underrepresent Indian achievement. Aryabhata's mathematics, the development of zero and the decimal system, Sushruta's medical contributions, ancient Indian astronomy, the linguistic diversity preserved across millennia — these are documented with the same rigor applied to coverage of global achievements. India is woven naturally throughout broader global coverage.

Frequently Asked Questions
What are some surprising facts about India?

India contains many surprising facts: it is the world's largest democracy with over 900 million eligible voters, has 22 officially recognized languages and over 19,500 dialects, is home to the world's wettest place (Mawsynram, Meghalaya, averaging 11,872 mm rainfall annually), invented the decimal system and the concept of zero, hosts the largest peaceful gathering on Earth (Kumbh Mela, drawing 100+ million pilgrims), and houses both the largest film industry by output and the most diverse cuisine globally. The Indian Postal Service is the world's largest, with over 155,000 post offices.

Which is the largest country in the world by area?

Russia is the largest country in the world by area, covering approximately 17.1 million square kilometers — about 11% of Earth's total land surface. It spans 11 time zones and borders 14 countries. The next four largest are Canada (9.98 million km²), United States (9.83 million km² including territorial waters), China (9.6 million km²), and Brazil (8.51 million km²). India ranks 7th globally with 3.29 million km², after Australia (6th, 7.7 million km²). By population, however, India is the largest country (1.45+ billion as of 2026), having surpassed China in 2023.

How many languages are spoken in India?

India recognizes 22 official languages under the Eighth Schedule of the Constitution: Hindi, English, Assamese, Bengali, Bodo, Dogri, Gujarati, Kannada, Kashmiri, Konkani, Maithili, Malayalam, Manipuri, Marathi, Nepali, Odia, Punjabi, Sanskrit, Santali, Sindhi, Tamil, Telugu, and Urdu. Beyond these, the 2011 Census recorded 121 languages with over 10,000 speakers each and 1,369 mother tongues. Total dialects exceed 19,500 across India. Hindi is the most spoken first language (528 million speakers, ~43%) and English serves as an associate official language. India is the 4th most linguistically diverse country in the world.

What is the speed of light?

The speed of light in vacuum is exactly 299,792,458 meters per second (approximately 3 × 10⁸ m/s, or about 1.08 billion km/h). This value is now defined exactly rather than measured, and it serves as the basis for defining the meter in the International System of Units. Light slows down when traveling through different media — for example, it moves at about 75% of vacuum speed through water (225,000 km/s) and 65% through glass (200,000 km/s). According to Einstein's special relativity, the speed of light in vacuum is the universal speed limit; no information or matter can travel faster.

Why is the sky blue?

The sky appears blue due to Rayleigh scattering — sunlight contains all visible colors, and shorter wavelengths (blue and violet light) scatter more easily off the small molecules in Earth's atmosphere than longer wavelengths (red and orange). Although violet light scatters even more than blue, our eyes are more sensitive to blue and the sun emits less violet light, so we perceive a blue sky. At sunrise and sunset, sunlight travels through more atmosphere, scattering out most blue light and leaving the red and orange hues we see at the horizon. The same physics explains why deep oceans look blue and distant mountains appear hazy.

Who discovered zero?

The concept of zero as a numeral was developed in ancient India. The Indian mathematician Brahmagupta (598–668 CE) wrote the first known explicit mathematical treatment of zero, including rules for arithmetic operations involving zero, in his book Brahmasphuṭasiddhānta (628 CE). Earlier, the Bakhshali manuscript (likely 3rd–4th century CE, debated dating) shows dot symbols used to represent zero as a placeholder. The concept spread from India to the Islamic world via translators like Al-Khwarizmi, then to Europe via Arab mathematicians. Without zero, modern algebra, calculus, computer programming, and digital technology would not exist as they do.

How old is the universe?

The universe is approximately 13.8 billion years old, based on measurements of cosmic microwave background radiation by the Planck mission, the Hubble Space Telescope, and ground-based observations. The current best estimate is 13.787 ± 0.020 billion years. The universe began with the Big Bang, expanded rapidly during a period called cosmic inflation, formed atoms about 380,000 years later, and began forming stars and galaxies hundreds of millions of years after that. The observable universe is approximately 93 billion light-years in diameter — larger than 13.8 billion light-years because space itself has been expanding throughout cosmic history.

What is the smallest country in the world?

Vatican City is the smallest country in the world by both area and population — only 0.49 square kilometers (44 hectares) and approximately 800 residents as of 2026. It is an independent city-state enclaved within Rome, Italy, serving as the spiritual and administrative center of the Roman Catholic Church and the residence of the Pope. The next smallest countries are Monaco (2.02 km²), Nauru (21 km²), Tuvalu (26 km²), and San Marino (61 km²). For comparison, India's smallest state is Goa (3,702 km², about 7,500 times the size of Vatican City).

How many bones are in the human body?

An adult human body has 206 bones. Babies are born with approximately 270 bones, but many fuse together during growth — for example, the bones of the skull and the sacrum form by fusion of multiple bones during childhood and adolescence. The smallest bone is the stapes in the middle ear (about 3 mm long), and the longest is the femur (thigh bone), typically 45–50 cm in adults. Bones house bone marrow that produces blood cells, store 99% of the body's calcium, protect vital organs, and serve as the structural framework for movement.

Why do we have leap years?

Leap years exist because Earth takes approximately 365.2422 days to orbit the Sun — not exactly 365 days. Without leap years, the calendar would drift by about a quarter day annually, accumulating to nearly a month over a century. Adding an extra day (February 29) every four years compensates for most of this drift. The Gregorian calendar refines this further: years divisible by 100 are not leap years unless also divisible by 400. So 2000 was a leap year, but 1900 was not. The next leap years are 2028, 2032, 2036. This system keeps the calendar aligned with seasons to within one day per 3,236 years.