Gagarin's height is 157 centimeters.
Hitler's Remains in Russia
The debates surrounding Adolf Hitler's death have raged for decades. Even 80 years after the end of World War II, there are those who doubt: did the Führer really shoot himself in the Berlin bunker? Perhaps he fled to South America, as many of his aides did? These doubts were largely fueled by the fact that the Soviet Union for many years kept silent about what exactly was found in May 1945 and where the remains of the most terrifying dictator of the 20th century ultimately ended up.
Imagine a substance, one kilogram of which costs twenty million dollars. It is almost never found on Earth, but is abundantly scattered across the Moon's surface. It can cool quantum computers to temperatures near absolute zero, and perhaps someday will become the fuel for clean thermonuclear energy. This is not the plot of a science fiction novel. This is helium-3 — a rare isotope that has today become central to a new space race.
How the Mariana Trench Was Conquered
Why Are Jews Considered the Smartest People?
Why are Jews considered the most intelligent?
Why are the people of Iran called Persians?
Why Is Volkswagen Called the "People's Car"?
Why is Volkswagen called a 'people's car' brand?
Why on the day preceding the coupon payment, and on the payment date itself, does the exchange often show zero accrued interest?
This article examines the phenomenon of so-called "one-year seeds" — seeds that produce a crop only in the first generation and cannot be used for subsequent sowing. Based on an analysis of the history of Genetic Use Restriction Technology (GURT), known as "Terminator Technology," as well as F1 hybrid seeds currently available on the market, the article reconstructs the actual picture of which seeds truly require annual purchase and why. Particular attention is devoted to distinguishing myths from facts: no agricultural corporation in the world has commercialized genetically modified sterile seeds, yet F1 hybrid seeds, widely available on the market, are biologically unsuitable for seed saving. For Ukraine's agricultural sector, where farmers annually face a choice between the productivity of hybrids and the cost savings of traditional varieties, understanding these mechanisms holds special practical significance.
This article examines the phenomenon of the "Russian gaze," which became an unexpected global trend in early 2026. Based on analysis of media publications, social media content, and expert commentary, the nature of this phenomenon, its cultural roots, and mechanisms of dissemination are reconstructed. Particular attention is devoted to the paradoxical situation: at a time when Western countries are attempting to "cancel" Russian culture, global interest in it not only does not fade but acquires new, viral forms. Accompanying trends are also analyzed: the fashion for "Slavic chic" in clothing, the popularity of Russian music abroad, and foreigners' attempts to master the elusive specificity of Russian facial expression.