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5 Reasons HR Management

 There are various other reasons why Human Resource includedmoney is imperative for every organization. The top 5 reasons are listed below: 1.Formulation Of Right Strategies A perfectly brainstormed and meticulously implemented business plan ensures the success of the organization, and an HR manager is the one who acts as the strategy maker. HR possess a high level of knowledge and they are expected to use this knowledge to ensure the achievement of organizational goals with the optimum use of manpower. They are expected to formulate result-driven strategies that facilitate the achievement of the desired goals. They participate in the various decision-making process including recruitment, training & development, outsourcing, as well as the formulation of collaboration strategies according to the demands of the business. 2. Managing Safety and Risk Why do employees get injured while working? Is it their fault or the company's fault? Well, every task involves certain risks but i

An Earth-Size Exoplanet In Its Star's "Goldilocks" Zone

 Ever since the first exoplanet was discovered a generation ago, astronomers have learned to expect the unexpected. For over twenty years, a fantastic treasure trove of weird Wonder Worlds have been discovered. Indeed, some of these very alien planets, in orbit around stars beyond our Sun, are so bizarre that astronomers never thought anything like them could really exist in the Cosmos--that is, until they were discovered. Strange distant worlds aside, the Holy Grail of planet-hunting astronomers has long been to find worlds more like home. In January 2020, astronomers announced the discovery of just such a long-sought world--the first to be found by NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). The distant Earth-size planet is comfortably located in its star's habitable zone The habitable zone of a star is that "Goldilocks" range of distances where conditions are not too hot, not too cold, but "just right" for liquid water to pool on the surface. W

Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?

 The comets of our own Solar System come shrieking into the brilliant light and melting heat of the inner regions, as they flee from their birthplace in a frigid , dark domain far, far away. In this mysterious region of cold, perpetual twilight, our own Solar System's sparkling, icy comet nuclei linger as relics of an ancient era when planets were first forming from myriad colliding and merging frozen chunks of primordial material called planetesimals--the building blocks of major planets. But sometimes a comet that wanders inward towards our Sun is the icy offspring of a distant star beyond our own. In January 2020, astronomers at the National Astronomical Observatory (NAOJ) in Japan, announced that they have analyzed the paths of a duo of frozen vagabonds on their way out of our Solar System and determined that they most likely were born in the family of another star. These findings improve astronomers' understanding of the outer limits of our Sun's own family--and beyon

e: Two Different Worlds

 Weird things happened in the outer Solar System when it was first a'borning . The ice-giants, Uranus and Neptune, are the two outermost major planets of our Sun's family, and in size, bulk, composition, and great distance from our Star, they are very much alike. Both distant worlds are clearly different from the quartet of small rocky inner planets--Mercury , Venus, Earth, and Mars--as well as from the duo of gas-giant planets, Jupiter and Saturn. Ice giants are planets that contain elements heavier than hydrogen and helium, such as oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur. Although the two planets should be almost identical twins, they are not. In February 2020, a team of planetary scientists from the University of Zurich in Bern, Switzerland, told the press that they believe they have discovered why. "There are... striking differences between the two planets that require explanation," commented Dr. Christian Reinhardt in a February 2020 PlanetS Press Release. Dr. Reinh