
It asked for contributions from those who turn the everyday into the unique and the ordinary into the xxxxxxtra-ordaniary. Something that is able to create an alternative universe, in which thrilling transformation, mystic metamorphosis, and insane invention build up a modern wunderkammer, a visionary show window and a living laboratory. Junk Jet nightdreamt of something that has the potential to fluidize what has become monumental, of something that speculates on speculation. Junk Jet daydreamt of alga plantations, crystal architectures, optical jamboree, synthetic foam buildings, multimagic rainbow colorings, of all that has the potential to question contemporary design and architecture and its statistical rationality. Junk Jet n☄ was combing through studios, laboratories, and garages to find those works and theories that make 1 become 2, 2 become 3, 3 …, works that make something out of nothing or nothing out of something, that discover new – even if microscaled – galaxies, that believe in alchemy and maintain a certain kind of apocalyptic thought works that move from mumbo-jumbo to real magic and back. From the year 2013, the “Raman Effect” has been designated as an International Historic Chemical Landmark by The American Chemical Society. For his big invention, he was honored through the various Indian awards including the Nobel Prize in the year 1930. Sir Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman had worked from 1907 to 1933 at the Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science, Kolkata, West Bengal in India during which he had researched on many topics of the Physics from which the Raman Effect (effect on scattering of light when passing through different materials) became his great success and discovery which has been marked in the Indian history. For his great success in the field of science in India, Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman was awarded and honored with the Nobel Prize in the Physics in the year 1930.

National Science Day is celebrated all over India with great enthusiasm on the 28th of February every year in order to commemorate the invention of the Raman Effect in India by the Indian physicist, Sir Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman on the same day in the year 1928. But one thing is sure: If you do any science experiment, you will definitely need pizza to give you insight and energy. Parker menus up the variations on the ghost lab creator machine.
