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Archives: News

  • Terrorism and Challenges Related To It

    National IED Data Management System (NIDMS)  

    Why in the News?

    Union Home Minister Amit Shah virtually inaugurated the National IED Data Management System (NIDMS) at the National Security Guard garrison in Manesar, calling it a next generation shield against terrorism.

    What is NIDMS

    • A national online digital platform and centralised repository of data related to Improvised Explosive Device (IED) incidents
    • Designed to support investigation, pattern analysis, and deterrence strategies against terror attacks
    • Provides single click access to IED related data across India
    • Nodal Agency: National Security Guard (NSG)
    • Launched by the Ministry of Home Affairs

    Key Objectives

    • Strengthen counter terrorism investigations
    • Identify patterns in modus operandi and explosives
    • Enable scientific and evidence based prosecution
    • Improve inter agency coordination

    Key Features

    • Two way data platform
      • Agencies can upload fresh IED incident data
      • Agencies can access historical data
    • Comprehensive database: Chronicles all bomb blasts since 1999
    • One nation one data repository: Uniform access for central and state agencies
    • Fully secure national digital platform
    • Enables standardisation, integration, and secure sharing of IED data

    Agencies Covered

    • National Investigation Agency
    • State Anti Terrorism Squads
    • Central Armed Police Forces
    • State and Union Territory police forces
    • Intelligence and investigation agencies

    Integration with Other Security Databases

    NIDMS will interlink with existing national security platforms:

    • CCTNS connecting over 17,700 police stations
    • ICJS 2 integrating data from 22,000 courts
    • e Prisons database with over 2.2 crore prisoners
    • e Prosecution database with around 2 crore cases
    • e Forensics with more than 31 lakh samples
    • NAFIS with over 1.2 crore fingerprints
    [2020] In India, the term “Public Key Infrastructure” is used in the context of: 

    (a) Digital security infrastructure 

    (b) Food security infrastructure 

    (c) Health care and education infrastructure 

    (d) Telecommunication and transportation infrastructure

  • Foreign Policy Watch: India – EU

    India Participates in the Weimar Triangle Format  

    Why in the News?

    India participated for the first time in the Weimar Triangle format, where Poland publicly supported India amid United States pressure on Russian oil imports, signalling growing strategic convergence between India and key European powers.

    What is the Weimar Triangle

    • A trilateral political and diplomatic grouping
    • Members: France, Germany and Poland
    • Created to promote European integration, political dialogue, and security cooperation
    • Established in 1991
    • Named after Weimar
    • First meeting of the three foreign ministers held in Weimar
    • Initially focused on post Cold War European reconciliation

    Aims of the Weimar Triangle

    • Build a united and secure Europe
    • Strengthen political, security, and economic cooperation
    • Coordinate responses to Russia related security challenges
    • Bridge Western Europe and Central Eastern Europe

    Significance of India’s Participation

    • Marks India’s diplomatic outreach beyond traditional EU formats
    • Indicates European strategic autonomy in engaging India
    • Public support by Poland strengthens India’s position on energy security
    • Reflects growing India Europe convergence amid global geopolitical stress

    Prelims Pointers

    • Weimar Triangle has three European members
    • Created in 1991
    • Not an EU institution but an informal strategic forum
    • Important in Russia Ukraine context
    • India participated for the first time
    [2023] Consider the following statements: 

    Statement-I: Recently, the United States of America (USA) and the European Union (EU) have launched the ‘Trade and Technology Council’

    Statement-II: The USA and the EU claim that through this they are trying to bring technological progress and physical productivity under their control

    Which one of the following is correct in respect of the above statements? 

    (a) Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct and Statement-II is the correct explanation for Statement-I 

    (b) Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct and Statement-II is not the correct explanation for Statement-I 

    (c) Statement-I is correct but Statement-II is incorrect 

    (d) Statement-I is incorrect but Statement-II is correct

  • Promoting Science and Technology – Missions,Policies & Schemes

    Vehicle-to-Vehicle Communication Technology 

    Why in the News?

    The Government of India is preparing to roll out Vehicle To Vehicle (V2V) communication technology by the end of 2026 to significantly reduce road accidents, especially during fog, rear end collisions, and pile ups.

    What is Vehicle To Vehicle (V2V) Technology

    • A direct communication system that allows vehicles to exchange information with each other
    • Works without mobile network or internet
    • Vehicles send and receive real time safety alerts when another vehicle comes dangerously close
    • Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Road Transport and Highways

    How the V2V System Works

    • A SIM like communication device installed inside vehicles
    • Vehicles broadcast signals about: Speed, Position, Direction and Sudden braking
    • Nearby vehicles receive instant alerts and warn drivers

    Key Features

    • 360 degree communication: Alerts received from all sides of the vehicle
    • Distance warning system: Warns drivers if another vehicle comes too close
    • Stationary vehicle detection: Alerts about parked or broken down vehicles on roads
    • Fog safety: Highly effective during low visibility conditions
    • Pile up prevention: Reduces chances of multi vehicle collisions on highways
    [2023] Consider the following actions: 

    1. Detection of car crash/collision which results in the deployment of airbags almost instantaneously 

    2. Detection of accidental free fall of a laptop towards the ground which results in the immediate turning off of the hard drive

    3. Detection of the tilt of the smart phone which results in the rotation of display between portrait and landscape mode 

    In how many of the above actions is the function of accelerometer required? 

    (a) Only one (b) Only two (c) All three (d) None

  • Festivals, Dances, Theatre, Literature, Art in News

    Zehanpora Buddhist Site and Kashmir’s Ancient Buddhist Past  

    Why in the News?

    Archaeologists have unearthed ancient Buddhist stupas and settlement remains at Zehanpora in Baramulla, reviving Kashmir’s 2,000 year old Buddhist past. The breakthrough was aided by century old photographs preserved in a French museum, which guided modern excavations.

    About the Zehanpora Discovery

    • Location: Zehanpora village, Baramulla district, along the Jhelum River
    • Site lies on an ancient Silk Route corridor linking Kashmir to Central Asia and Kandahar
    • Excavations began in July 2025 after drone surveys, aerial mapping, and ground verification

    Key Archaeological Findings

    • Three Buddhist stupas
    • Urban type settlement complex likely including chaityas and viharas
    • Apsidal stupa architecture with pradakshina path
    • Kushan era artefacts
      • Pottery shards
      • Copper objects
      • Stone walls
    • Evidence of long term monastic and urban activity

    Historical Significance

    Gandhara Buddhist Network

    • Discovery firmly links Kashmir to the Gandhara Buddhist cultural network
    • Establishes Kashmir as a central hub of Buddhist learning, not a peripheral region
    • Demonstrates cultural and intellectual exchange between South Asia and Central Asia

    Chronological Context

    • Buddhist presence in Kashmir began during Ashoka’s reign (3rd century BCE)
    • Flourished under the Kushan Empire (1st to 3rd century CE)
    • Kushans promoted urbanisation, trade, and Buddhism

    Literary Corroboration

    • Chinese pilgrim Xuanzang mentioned entering Kashmir via the Silk Route
    • Zehanpora excavation provides material archaeological evidence supporting textual references

    Role of French Museum Photographs

    • In 2023, century old photographs showing three stupas in Baramulla were discovered
    • Images validated local archaeological hypotheses
    • Triggered systematic excavation and site identification

    Prelims Pointers

    • Zehanpora is located in Baramulla district
    • Site linked to Gandhara Buddhism
    • Artefacts belong mainly to Kushan period
    • Apsidal stupas allow circumambulatory worship
    • Discovery aided by foreign archival material
    [2023] With reference to ancient India, consider the following statements: 

    1. The concept of Stupa is Buddhist in origin. 

    2. Stupa was generally a repository of relics

    3. Stupa was a votive and commemorative structure in Buddhist tradition

    How many of the statements given above are correct? 

    (a) Only one (b) Only two (c) All three (d) None

  • Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States

    [10th January 2026] The Hindu OpED: De-dollarisation fear

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2019] What introduces friction into the ties between India and the United States is that Washington is still unable to find for India a position in its global strategy, which would satisfy India’s national self-esteem and ambitions’. Explain with suitable examples.

    Linkage: UPSC GS-II frequently examines how great-power strategies affect India’s strategic autonomy, especially in the context of U.S. unilateralism, sanctions, trade coercion, and global power realignments.

    Mentor’s Comment

    Recent U.S. trade and sanctions measures aimed at Russia, China, and third-country partners mark a decisive shift from market-led globalisation to coercive economic statecraft. The article examines how aggressive tariff threats, secondary sanctions, and currency weaponisation are accelerating global de-dollarisation pressures, with India emerging as a key collateral stakeholder in a fragmenting global financial order.

    Why in the News

    The U.S. administration has proposed tariffs of up to 500% on countries importing Russian oil. It has also expanded sanctions on Russian and Venezuelan energy assets. This represents a shift from targeted sanctions to secondary economic coercion, affecting neutral partners like India. At the same time, growing non-dollar energy settlements and China’s yuan-based oil trade indicate stress in the dollar-centric system, raising concerns over trade stability, capital flows, and autonomy of emerging economies.

    How has economic coercion replaced market-led globalisation?

    1. Secondary sanctions: Extends U.S. trade penalties to third countries purchasing Russian oil, redefining neutrality as non-compliance.
    2. Punitive tariffs: Proposals of up to 500% import tariffs convert trade policy into a deterrence instrument rather than a competitiveness tool.
    3. Asset targeting: Sanctions on Russian and Venezuelan energy infrastructure weaken supply-side stability rather than isolating individual firms.
    4. Systemic impact: Shifts global trade from rules-based predictability to power-based negotiation.

    Why is the dollar’s centrality increasingly contested?

    1. Currency weaponisation: Repeated use of the dollar-clearing system for sanctions enforcement erodes trust among trading partners.
    2. Trade settlement diversification: Russia now conducts over 20% of its crude exports outside the dollar system.
    3. Historical contrast: The dollar underpinned global finance throughout the late 20th century due to neutrality and liquidity, not coercion.
    4. Structural signal: Reduced dollar reliance reflects risk hedging, not ideological alignment.

    How are energy markets driving de-dollarisation?

    1. Non-dollar oil trade: China’s payment for Russian crude in yuan indicates partial energy-market realignment.
    2. Discount-driven trade: India’s increased Russian oil imports reflect price arbitrage rather than political alignment.
    3. Settlement experimentation: Bilateral currency mechanisms reduce exposure to sanctions-induced payment disruptions.
    4. Market fragmentation: Energy trade increasingly follows geopolitical blocs rather than price efficiency alone.

    What are the implications for India’s trade and exports?

    1. Export vulnerability: U.S. tariffs could affect textiles, footwear, marine products, pharmaceuticals, electronics, and engineering goods.
    2. Negotiating asymmetry: India faces pressure to absorb geopolitical costs despite non-alignment.
    3. Investment uncertainty: Escalating trade coercion weakens investor confidence amid already volatile capital flows.
    4. Macroeconomic stress: Potential spillovers include currency pressure, trade deficits, and costlier imports.

    How does China’s trade posture differ from India’s exposure?

    1. Export diversification: China has significantly reduced dependence on U.S. markets through diversified trade corridors.
    2. Scale advantage: China’s large domestic market cushions external shocks.
    3. Strategic insulation: India’s export basket remains more sensitive to Western market access.
    4. Asymmetric resilience: De-dollarisation favours economies with manufacturing scale and settlement alternatives.

    Is the global financial architecture entering a transition phase?

    1. Multipolar currency signals: Rise of yuan, local currencies, and barter-like arrangements.
    2. Erosion of predictability: Sanctions-driven finance increases transaction costs and compliance risks.
    3. Institutional strain: Bretton Woods-era assumptions face stress from unilateral enforcement actions.
    4. Systemic uncertainty: The issue extends beyond geopolitics to the architecture of global trade itself.

    Conclusion

    The expanding use of sanctions, tariffs, and financial leverage by the United States signals a shift from a rules-based economic order to coercive geo-economics, weakening trust in the dollar-centric system. For India, this moment underscores the necessity of safeguarding strategic autonomy through diversified trade partnerships, resilient payment mechanisms, and calibrated engagement with competing power blocs in a transitioning global financial order.

  • Foreign Policy Watch: India-Africa

    Somaliland is no longer a diplomatic endnote

    Why in the News?

    Israel recognised Somaliland as an independent state in December 2025. It is the first such recognition by a strategically significant UN member. The decision ends decades of diplomatic ambiguity. It departs from the long-standing international support for Somalia’s territorial integrity. As a result, Somaliland has moved from diplomatic obscurity to strategic relevance. This shift is significant in the Horn of Africa, a region critical to Red Sea and Gulf of Aden security.

    About Somaliland:

    1. Somaliland a self-governing entity that declared independence from Somalia in 1991.
    2. It has functioned as a de facto state for over three decades.
    3. Despite internal stability and regular elections, it remained internationally unrecognised.
    4. Most countries continued to uphold Somalia’s territorial integrity.
    5. This kept Somaliland diplomatically marginal despite its strategic location in the Horn of Africa.

    Why does Israel’s recognition of Somaliland matter geopolitically?

    1. Diplomatic Rupture: Breaks the international consensus of non-recognition upheld since Somalia’s collapse.
    2. Security Recalibration: Positions Somaliland as a node in Israel’s Red Sea and Gulf of Aden security strategy.
    3. Regional Escalation: Introduces military, intelligence, and diplomatic contestation into an already volatile maritime corridor.

    How does Somaliland’s internal stability contrast with Somalia’s state fragility?

    1. Governance Record: Maintains competitive elections for over three decades.
    2. Security Conditions: Demonstrates relative internal security compared to Somalia’s chronic instability.
    3. State Capacity: Functions as a de facto state, exposing limits of recognition-based legitimacy frameworks.

    Why does China face a strategic dilemma over Somaliland?

    1. Sovereignty Principle: Beijing’s rejection of secessionist movements conflicts with Somaliland’s persistent statehood.
    2. Taiwan Factor: Somaliland’s decision in 2020 to host Taiwan’s representative office directly challenged the “One China” principle.
    3. Recognition Precedent: Israeli endorsement strengthens Somaliland’s claim more than any previous engagement.

    How has the Horn of Africa become central to great-power competition?

    1. Strategic Geography: Controls access to the Bab el-Mandeb, linking the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden.
    2. Military Presence: Hosts multiple foreign military bases, notably in Djibouti.
    3. Security Architecture: Somaliland’s recognition disrupts a carefully curated regional balance.

    What risks does Israel’s move create for regional stability?

    1. Chinese Countermeasures: Increased likelihood of economic coercion, diplomatic pressure, and information warfare.
    2. Alliance Polarisation: Forces regional states to recalibrate positions between competing power blocs.
    3. Escalatory Dynamics: Adds intelligence and military rivalry to a region already prone to conflict spillovers.

    How does this episode expose limits of China’s Africa strategy?

    1. Influence Constraints: Demonstrates inability to prevent diplomatic shifts despite economic leverage.
    2. Strategic Costs: Raises costs of maintaining the status quo amid rival interventions.
    3. Credibility Test: Challenges China’s image as a neutral development partner.

    Conclusion

    Israel’s recognition of Somaliland is not merely symbolic; it signals the transformation of the Horn of Africa into a frontline of global geopolitical contestation. The episode underscores the tension between sovereignty norms and ground realities, while revealing how regional micro-states can acquire outsized strategic relevance in an era of fragmented global order.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2021] “If the last few decades were of Asia’s growth story, the next few are expected to be of Africa’s.” In the light of this statement, examine India’s influence in Africa in recent years.

    Linkage: This question reflects GS-II focus on Africa’s rising geopolitical significance and the role of external powers in shaping the continent’s growth trajectory. The Somaliland episode highlights how Africa, especially the Horn of Africa, is emerging as a theatre of strategic competition.

  • Foreign Policy Watch: India-Iran

    Beyond economy, Iran stir reflects rage against regime

    Why in the News

    Iran has witnessed its third major wave of protests in three years, triggered by a rapidly depreciating currency and a sharp rise in the cost of living. The Iranian rial crossed 14.8 lakh rials per dollar in January 2026, reflecting severe macroeconomic stress. Unlike earlier protests, the current unrest increasingly targets regime legitimacy rather than isolated economic grievances, marking a qualitative shift in public anger.

    Introduction

    Iran is experiencing a convergence of economic collapse, political fatigue, and institutional rigidity. While inflation and currency depreciation act as immediate triggers, the protests reflect deep-rooted dissatisfaction with governance structures, the exclusionary political system, and the shrinking space for reform within the Islamic Republic.

    Is the current unrest primarily economic in nature?

    1. Currency depreciation: The Iranian rial has lost value rapidly, falling from 8.17 lakh per dollar in January 2025 to 14.8 lakh by January 2026, indicating macroeconomic instability.
    2. Inflationary pressures: Inflation crossed 30% in 2025, while food inflation exceeded 52%, eroding real incomes.
    3. Purchasing power collapse: Rising import costs and sanctions-driven shortages have reduced household consumption capacity.
    4. Recurring pattern: Similar economic triggers were visible in protests of 2017-18, 2019, and 2022, indicating unresolved structural weaknesses.

    Why do these protests extend beyond economic grievances?

    1. Regime-directed anger: Protest slogans increasingly target the Islamic Republic itself, not just economic managers.
    2. Legitimacy deficit: Long-standing political exclusion and weak accountability mechanisms have amplified discontent.
    3. Historical continuity: Economic hardship has consistently acted as a vehicle for political dissent over the past two decades.
    4. Symbolic rupture: Public defiance now challenges the foundational narrative of revolutionary governance.

    How has Iran’s political structure constrained internal reform?

    1. Clerical dominance: The Islamic Republic’s institutional design concentrates power within unelected clerical bodies.
    2. IRGC entrenchment: The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps controls large segments of the economy and security apparatus.
    3. Electoral erosion: Disqualification of reformist candidates has weakened the representative character of elections.
    4. Policy rigidity: Governance prioritises regime survival over economic rationalisation.

    Why is this moment particularly vulnerable for the regime?

    1. Leadership uncertainty: Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s advanced age raises succession concerns.
    2. Factional paralysis: Internal elite divisions limit coordinated economic or political responses.
    3. Social exhaustion: Repeated protest cycles have normalised public confrontation with authority.
    4. Youth alienation: A demographically young population faces unemployment and restricted mobility.

    How have external pressures compounded Iran’s internal crisis?

    1. Sanctions impact: US-led sanctions continue to restrict oil revenues, banking access, and trade.
    2. Geopolitical isolation: Iran’s global standing remains constrained despite regional influence.
    3. Security prioritisation: External threats have reinforced a militarised governance approach, reducing focus on civilian welfare.
    4. Limited diplomatic relief: No durable sanctions relief has materialised to stabilise the economy.

    Conclusion

    Iran’s current unrest reflects a structural crisis of governance rather than a cyclical economic downturn. Inflation and currency collapse act as triggers, but the persistence of protests signals a deeper crisis of political legitimacy, one that economic management alone cannot resolve without systemic political reform. 

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2018] In what ways would the ongoing U.S-Iran Nuclear Pact Controversy affect the national interest of India? How should India respond to this situation?

    Linkage: UPSC frequently frames questions on major geopolitical flashpoints such as the U.S.-Iran nuclear issue, as they have direct implications for India’s foreign policy, energy security, and strategic autonomy. The article highlights how prolonged sanctions and nuclear-related tensions have translated into economic distress and internal instability in Iran.

  • Corporate Social Responsibility: Issues & Development

    PANKHUDI Portal  

    Why in the News?

    The Union Minister launched PANKHUDI, an integrated digital portal to improve ease of living for women and children by streamlining CSR and voluntary partnerships.

    About PANKHUDI Portal

    • A single window integrated digital platform
    • Facilitates CSR and voluntary contributions for women and child development
    • Enables transparent funding, proposal tracking, and outcome monitoring
    • Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Women and Child Development

    Objectives

    • Strengthen coordination among government, citizens, NRIs, NGOs, and corporates
    • Improve transparency and accountability in social investments
    • Enhance service delivery and outcomes for women and children nationwide

    Key Features

    Unified CSR Interface

    • Single platform for individuals, NRIs, NGOs, corporates, and government agencies
    • Simplifies collaboration with government programmes
    • Priority Focus Areas: Nutrition, Health, Early Childhood Care and Education,Child welfare and protection, Women’s safety and empowerment

    Support to Flagship Missions

    • Digitally strengthens
      • Mission Saksham Anganwadi and Poshan 2.0
      • Mission Vatsalya
      • Mission Shakti

    End-to-End Transparency

    • Online registration and proposal submission
    • Digital approvals and real time monitoring
    • Non cash contributions only to ensure traceability

    Scale of Impact

    • Covers more than 14 lakh Anganwadi Centres
    • Around 5,000 Child Care Institutions
    • Nearly 800 One Stop Centres
    • About 500 Shakhi Niwas
    • Around 400 Shakti Sadan

    Significance

    • Reduces procedural friction in government partnerships
    • Enhances monitoring and convergence of welfare schemes
    • Improves measurable impact of CSR and voluntary funding
    • Strengthens digital governance in social sector delivery

    Prelims Pointers

    • PANKHUDI is a CSR facilitation portal
    • Focused on women and child development
    • Operates through non cash contributions
    • Linked with major flagship missions
    [2024] With reference to Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) rules in India, consider the following statements: 

    1. CSR rules specify that expenditures that benefit the company directly or its employees will not be considered as CSR activities. 

    2. CSR rules do not specify minimum spending on CSR activities. 

    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 

    (a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2

  • Textile Sector – Cotton, Jute, Wool, Silk, Handloom, etc.

    District Led Textiles Transformation (DLTT) Plan

    Why in the News?

    The Ministry of Textiles has launched the District Led Textiles Transformation (DLTT) Plan to convert 100 high potential districts into Global Export Champions and upgrade 100 Aspirational Districts into self reliant textile hubs.

    What is the DLTT Plan

    • A sector specific, district level transformation strategy for textiles
    • Uses data driven categorisation to tailor interventions
    • Covers districts at different stages, from advanced export clusters to foundation stage districts

    Objectives

    • Drive inclusive, sustainable, and export oriented growth in textiles
    • Decentralise policy execution to districts
    • Strengthen MSMEs and formalise the workforce
    • Build globally competitive textile clusters

    Significance

    • Moves India up the textile value chain
    • Diversifies export baskets
    • Strengthens MSMEs and formalises labour
    • Boosts women led and SHG led enterprises
    • Accelerates development in aspirational, eastern, and north eastern districts

    Prelims Pointers

    • DLTT follows a district first approach
    • Uses data driven classification
    • Integrates skilling, infrastructure, and exports
    • Strong focus on inclusive and regional development
    [2022] Which of the following activities constitute the real sector in the economy? 

    1. Farmers harvesting their crops 2. Textile mills converting raw cotton into fabrics 

    2. A commercial bank lending money to a trading company 

    3. A corporate body issuing Rupee Denominated Bonds overseas 

    Select the correct answer using the code given below: 

    (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2, 3 and 4 only (c) 1, 3 and 4 only (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4

  • ISRO Missions and Discoveries

    Dust Experiment (DEX) 

    Why in the News?

    Indian Space Research Organisation has confirmed that an interplanetary dust particle enters Earth’s atmosphere roughly every 16 minutes, based on observations from India’s first cosmic dust detector Dust Experiment (DEX).

    About Dust Experiment (DEX)

    • India’s first indigenously developed cosmic dust detector
    • Designed to detect and measure high speed interplanetary and orbital dust particles
    • Studies dust impacts in Earth’s upper atmosphere

    Developed by

    • Indian Space Research Organisation
    • Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad

    Mission Platform

    • Flown aboard PSLV Orbital Experimental Module (POEM)
    • Part of PSLV C58 XPoSat mission

    Aim

    • Direct measurement of cosmic dust flux
    • Improve understanding of space environment
    • Enhance satellite safety and planning of future crewed deep space missions

    Prelims Pointers

    • DEX is India’s first cosmic dust detector
    • Operates from PSLV POEM
    • Measures interplanetary dust particles
    • IDPs originate from comets and asteroids
    • Critical for satellite protection and deep space missions
    [2011] What is the difference between asteroids and comets? 

    1. Asteroids are small rocky planetoids, while comets are formed of frozen gases held together by rocky and metallic material

    2. Asteroids are found mostly between the orbits of Jupiter and Mars, while comets are found mostly between Venus and Mercury

    3. Comets show a perceptible glowing tail, while asteroids do not. 

    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 

    (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 1 and 3 only (c) 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3

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