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Its marvels will never cease

(Jami Tirmidhi)

Scientific and Archaeological Explanation of


the Ayaats of the Holy Quran

For the complete work, visit our blog

Miraculousquran.blogspot.com

Comments, queries and feedback at


Muhammad.Awais.Tahir@gmail.com
Surah Al Baqarah
Ayat 22

Who made the earth a resting place for you and the heaven a canopy and (Who) sends down rain from
the cloud then brings forth with it subsistence for you of the fruits; therefore do not set up rivals to
Allah while you know

M Shakir's Qur'an Translation

Who has made the earth your couch, and the heavens your canopy; and sent down rain from the
heavens; and brought forth therewith Fruits for your sustenance; then set not up rivals unto Allah
when ye know (the truth)

Yusuf Ali's Qur'an Translation

Who hath appointed the earth a resting-place for you and the sky a canopy; and causeth water to pour
down from the sky, thereby producing fruits as food for you. And do not set up rivals to Allah when ye
know (better)

Pickthall's Qur'an Translation

Earth as a couch (a living place)


There are various factors, which make the earth the only living planet. There are various divine 'balances' established
on the earth which make the earth a perfect living place, in fact, the only living place. Exploring only a few of the
millions of these delicate balances would be sufficient to show that the world we live in is specially designed for us.
The earth is a living planet where many complex systems run perfectly without stopping at all. When compared to
other planets, it is evident that in all its aspects the earth has been specially designed for human life. Built on
delicate balances, life prevails in every spot of this planet, from the atmosphere to the depths of the earth.

It is sufficient to look at millions of dead planets in space in order to understand that the delicate balances required
for life on earth is not a result of random coincidences. The conditions essential for life are too complicated to have
been formed 'on their own' and at random, and these conditions are specially created for life alone.

Let’s not go that far and explore the planets of our own solar system.

Climatic and Atmospheric Conditions of Planets of the Solar System


Pluto
The ninth planet from the Sun and outermost known planet of the solar system. Pluto is far away from Earth, and no
spacecraft has yet been sent to the planet. All the information astronomers have on Pluto comes from observation
through large telescopes. Pluto has a thin atmosphere consisting of nitrogen with traces of carbon monoxide and
methane. Atmospheric pressure on the planet's surface is about 100,000 times less than Earth's atmospheric
pressure at sea level. Pluto’s atmosphere is believed to freeze out as a snow on the planet’s surface for most of each
plutonian orbit. There had been a discussion going on amongst the scientists whether Pluto is a 'planet' according to
the modern definition or not. Irrespective of that from the above mentioned facts about Pluto it's quite clear that
there's no chance of human or any plant life on earth.

Photo Researchers, Inc./NASA/Science Source

Pluto

Pluto is farther from the Sun than the other planets in the solar system, although it occasionally moves in
closer than Neptune due to an irregular orbit. The small, rocky, and cold planet takes 247.7 years to revolve around the Sun.
This artist's rendition depicts Pluto, foreground; its moon, Charon, background; and the distant Sun, upper right.

Neptune
A major planet in the solar system, eighth planet from the Sun and fourth largest in diameter. Neptune maintains an
almost constant distance, about 4.5 billion km (about 2.8 billion mi), from the Sun. Neptune’s vast body of liquid
accounts for most of its volume. Scientists think this ocean is composed mostly of water as well as molecules of
methane and ammonia. Neptune’s ocean is extremely hot (about 4700°C/about 8500°F). The ocean remains liquid at
this temperature instead of evaporating because the pressure deep in Neptune is several million times higher than
the atmospheric pressure on Earth. Higher pressure holds molecules in liquid closer together and prevents them
from spreading apart to form vapor. Neptune has an active atmosphere, with winds and massive storms that may be
caused by heat escaping the planet’s interior. Neptune’s winds, which blow in a latitude direction, are faster in the
planet’s Polar Regions than they are at Neptune’s equator. Neptune has the fastest winds in the solar system,
reaching speeds of 2,000 km/h (1,200 mph)

NASA/JPL

Neptune

This image of Neptune, taken by the Voyager 2 spacecraft, shows the planet’s most prominent features.
The large, dark oval surrounded by white clouds near the planet’s equator is the Great Dark Spot, a
storm similar to Jupiter’s Great Red Spot. The smaller dark oval with a bright core below and to the right
of the Great Dark Spot is another storm known as Dark Spot 2.

Uranus
A major planet in the solar system, seventh planet from the Sun. Uranus contains mostly rock and water, with
hydrogen and helium (and trace amounts of methane) in its dense atmosphere. Astronomers believe that Uranus
formed from the same material—principally frozen water and rock—that composes most of the planet’s moons. As
the planet grew, pressures and temperatures in the planet’s interior increased, heating the planet’s frozen water
into a hot liquid. Uranus probably has a relatively small rocky core (smaller in size than Earth’s core), with a radius no
larger than 2,000 km (1,240 mi) and a temperature of about 6650°C (12,000°F). Uranus’s core may be small because
most of the rock composing the planet remains mixed with the body of water that surrounds the core and extends
upward to the planet’s atmosphere.

NASA

Uranus

Uranus’s blue-green color comes from the methane gas present in its cold, clear atmosphere. The dark
shadings at the right edge of the sphere correspond to the day-night boundary on the planet. Beyond
this boundary, Uranus’s northern hemisphere remains in a four-decade-long period of darkness because
of the way the planet rotates. Scientists compiled this view of Uranus from images returned from Voyager 2 in 1986, when the
probe was 9.1 million km (5.7 million mi) away from the planet.
Saturn
Sixth planet in order of distance from the Sun, and the second largest in the solar system. Saturn's most distinctive
feature is its ring system, which was first seen in 1610 by Italian scientist Galileo, using one of the first telescopes.
The temperatures of Saturn's cloud tops are close to –176°C (-285°F). The mean density of Saturn is eight times less
than that of Earth because the planet consists mainly of hydrogen. The enormous weight of Saturn's atmosphere
causes the atmospheric pressure to increase rapidly toward the interior, where the hydrogen gas condenses into a
liquid. Closer to the center of the planet, the liquid hydrogen is compressed into metallic hydrogen, which is an
electrical conductor. Electrical currents in this metallic hydrogen are responsible for the planet's magnetic field.

Photo Researchers, Inc./Chris Butler

Titan's Surface

Saturn’s moon Titan is actually larger than the planets Pluto and Mercury. This artist’s impression
depicts the moon’s sky as it might appear from Titan’s surface. Titan has the most Earth-like
atmosphere in the solar system.

Jupiter
Fifth planet from the Sun and the largest planet in the solar system. The fourth brightest object in Earth’s sky, after
the Sun, the Moon, and Venus. Jupiter is a ball of dense gas and has no solid surface. Jupiter may have a core
composed of rock-forming minerals like those trapped in comet ices, but the core makes up less than 5 percent of
the planet’s mass. The force of gravity at the level of the highest clouds in Jupiter’s atmosphere is about 2.5 times
the force of gravity at Earth’s surface. Gas and clouds in Jupiter’s atmosphere travel at high speeds. This
phenomenon is not fully understood but it is related to the planet’s high rate of rotation. Major storms often appear
suddenly on Jupiter. Jupiter’s storms are caused by bubbles of warmer gas rising through the atmosphere from deep
within the planet. These bubbles, carrying varying amounts of heat, create cloud systems that are constrained on the
north and south by bands of strong wind blowing in opposite directions. Unable to move north or south, and with no
solid landmasses to create friction, the storms roll in the winds and feed off smaller storm systems for weeks or
longer. Jupiter’s most famous storm, the Great Red Spot, has persisted for centuries. The Great Red Spot is so
enormous that if three Earths were placed side by side in front of it, they would scarcely span it.

Photo Researchers, Inc./NASA/Science Source

Great Red Spot

Jupiter’s atmosphere is composed mostly of hydrogen and helium with lesser amounts of
minor gases. White clouds of frozen ammonia crystals and other colored clouds, including the
Great Red Spot, swirl around in atmospheric currents as the planet rotates. The Great Red
Spot was photographed by Voyager 1 in 1979.

Mars
It is the fourth planet from the Sun. Mars is named for the Roman god of war and is sometimes called the red planet
because it appears fiery red in Earth’s night sky. Mars is a relatively small planet, with about half the diameter of
Earth and about one-tenth Earth’s mass. The force of gravity on the surface of Mars is about one-third of that on
Earth. Mars has twice the diameter and twice the surface gravity of Earth’s Moon. The surface of Mars would be a
harsh place for humans, but it is more like the surface of Earth than that of any other planet. The temperature on
Mars never gets much warmer than the temperature at Antarctica, and it is usually much colder. At the surface the
average temperature is about -55°C (about -67°F) and at the extremes it ranges from about -140° to 15°C (about -
225° to 60°F). During most of the year wind speeds are fairly low—about 7 km/h (about 4 mph)—but during dust
storms they can approach 70 to 80 km/h (40 to 50 mph). The atmosphere of Mars is 95 percent carbon dioxide,
nearly 3 percent nitrogen, and nearly 2 percent argon with tiny amounts of oxygen, carbon monoxide, water vapor,
ozone, and other trace gases. Earth’s atmosphere is mostly nitrogen and oxygen, with only 0.03 percent carbon
dioxide. The pressure of the Martian atmosphere varies with the seasons, ranging from 6 to 10 millibars, or about 1
percent of the air pressure at Earth’s surface. Most scientists today do not believe that there is any life on the
surface of Mars. Conditions at the surface are extremely hostile to life as we know it. Temperatures are usually well
below the freezing point of water, and the atmosphere is extremely thin and dry. Without a protective ozone layer
like Earth’s, ultraviolet radiation bathes the surface and would destroy any organic molecules exposed there.

NASA

Clouds on Mars

On an overcast Mars morning, clouds drift through a pink skyscape. In late July 1997 the Mars Pathfinder
lander returned the first pictures taken on Mars of an overcast sky. Scientists believe the Martian clouds
are made up of water-ice crystals and dust. The clouds appear in the Martian sky in the early morning and dissipate as the sun
warms the planet.

Venus
The second in distance from the Sun. Except for the Sun and the Moon, Venus is the brightest object in the sky. The
planet is called the morning star when it appears in the east at sunrise and the evening star when it is in the west at
sunset. The atmosphere of the planet consists of 97 percent carbon dioxide and is so thick that the surface pressure
is 96 bars (compared with 1 bar on Earth). The surface temperature on Venus varies little from place to place and is
extremely hot, about 462°C (736 K/864°F).

Photo Researchers, Inc./NASA/Science Source

Venus

Venus is the brightest object in our sky, after the sun and moon. Swirling clouds of sulfur and sulfuric
acid obscure Venus’s surface and inhibited study of the planet from Earth until technology permitted
space vehicles, outfitted with probes, to visit it. These probes determined that Venus is the hottest of
the planets, with a surface temperature of about 460° C (about 860° F). Scientists believe that a greenhouse effect causes the
extreme temperature, hypothesizing that the planet’s thick clouds and dense atmosphere trap energy from the sun. .

Mercury
Mercury (planet), one of the planets in the solar system. Mercury orbits closest to the Sun of all the planets. The
Mariner 10 spacecraft reported temperatures to be about 430°C (about 810°F) on the sunlit side and about -180°C
(about -290°F) on the dark side.

Photo Researchers, Inc./NASA/Science Source

Mercury

Mercury orbits closer to the Sun than any other planet, making it dry, hot, and virtually airless.
Although the planet’s cratered surface resembles that of the Moon, it is believed that the interior is
actually similar to Earth’s, consisting primarily of iron and other heavy elements. This composite
photograph was taken in 1974 by Mariner 10, the first probe to study Mercury in detail.
Earth
Earth one of nine planets in the solar system, the only planet known to harbor life, and the “home” of human beings.
A true 'living place' like the Qur'an mentioned. From space Earth resembles a big blue marble with swirling white
clouds floating above blue oceans. Unlike the other planets, Earth has a unique set of characteristics ideally suited to
supporting life as we know it. It is neither too hot, like Mercury, the closest planet to the Sun, nor too cold, like
distant Mars and the even more distant outer planets—Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, tiny Pluto. Earth’s
atmosphere includes just the right amount of gases that trap heat from the Sun, resulting in a moderate climate
suitable for water to exist in liquid form. The atmosphere also helps block radiation from the Sun that would be
harmful to life. Earth’s atmosphere distinguishes it from the planet Venus, which is otherwise much like Earth. Venus
is about the same size and mass as Earth and is also neither too near nor too far from the Sun. But because Venus
has too much heat-trapping carbon dioxide in its atmosphere, its surface is extremely hot—462°C (864°F)—hot
enough to melt lead and too hot for life to exist.

Hence Allah has made the earth (a bed, a couch) a living place that is governed by perfect balances necessary

for human life to exist.

Photo Researchers, Inc./NASA/Science Source

Earth

An oxygen-rich and protective atmosphere, moderate temperatures, abundant water, and a varied
chemical composition enable Earth to support life, the only planet known to harbor life. The planet is
composed of rock and metal, which are present in molten form beneath its surface. The Apollo 17
spacecraft took this snapshot in 1972 of the Arabian Peninsula, the African continent, and Antarctica
(most of the white area near the bottom).

The Heaven a Canopy


Word Analysis: The Arabic word used in the ayat is meaning structure, canopy or roof.

The heavens serve us the same purpose like the roof of a house does and save us from the
harmful rays. The magnetic field of the Van Allen radiation belt serves protects the earth from
many harmful rays coming out from all sorts of reactions going on in the immense cosmos
'outside'. The heaven only allow a part of the huge spectrum of rays to pass through; exactly
those, which we require.

Atmosphere

The Earth has all the attributes that are needed for life. One of them is the atmosphere, which serves as a shield protecting
living things.

Van Allen Radiation Belt


Inside the magnetosphere are the Van Allen radiation belts, named for the American physicist James A. Van Allen
who discovered them in 1958. The Van Allen belts are regions where charged particles from the Sun and from cosmic
rays are trapped and sent into spiral paths along the lines of Earth’s magnetic field. The radiation belts thereby shield
Earth’s surface from these highly energetic particles.
Ozone Layer
Ozone Layer is a region of the atmosphere from 19 to 48 km above the earth's surface. Ozone concentrations of up
to 10 parts per million occur in the ozone layer. The ozone forms there by the action of sunlight on oxygen. Ozone
layer of the atmosphere protects life on earth from the full force of the sun's cancer-causing ultraviolet radiation.
The layer of atmosphere above the troposphere is called the stratosphere. In the stratosphere, air temperature
begins to increase with height, mainly because ozone (a type of oxygen) in the stratosphere absorbs energy from the
sun, principally ultraviolet radiation. Although the amount of ozone in the stratosphere is quite small, it is important
because it protects living things on the earth by absorbing the sun’s harmful ultraviolet radiation. The earth's
atmosphere protects living organisms from the sun's ultraviolet radiation. If all the ultraviolet radiation produced by
the sun were allowed to reach the surface of the earth, most life on earth would probably be destroyed. Fortunately,
the ozone layer of the atmosphere absorbs almost all of the short-wavelength ultraviolet radiation, and much of the
long-wavelength ultraviolet radiation.

A strange thing to know is that it is the same ozone molecule, which acts as a pollutant when found at lower levels of
the atmosphere in urban smog. Up at the stratospheric level, however, ozone forms a protective layer that serves a
vital function: It absorbs the wavelength of solar radiation known as ultraviolet-B (UV-B). UV-B damages
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), the genetic molecule found in every living cell, increasing the risk of such problems as
cancer in humans. Because of its protective function, the ozone layer is essential to life on
Earth.

In the recent decades depletion in the ozone layer has caused much harm to life. Without
our atmosphere, there would be no life on Earth. A relatively thin envelope, the
atmosphere consists of layers of gases that support life and provide protection from
harmful radiation.

NASA/SVS/TOMS

Ozone Layer Hole

The ozone hole over the South Pole is apparent in this false-color image taken by a satellite in October 1999. Low levels of ozone
are shown in blue. Ozone is a gas that blocks harmful ultraviolet sunlight. Industrial chemicals released into the atmosphere
have caused ozone to break down, opening holes in the ozone layer that tend to concentrate at the poles.

This document is based on my under process book. I plan to collect all the Ayaats of the Holy Quran with deal with
scientific, historical and archaeological subjects. I am trying to provide explanation to those Ayaats in light of
Previous commentaries (Tafaseer), established science, archaeological discoveries and Arabic lexicons. Send in
your comments, queries and suggestion at Muhammad.Awais.Tahir@gmail.com

Please do not copy paste without permission, until my book is published, Insha’Allah.

For the complete work, visit our blog

Miraculousquran.blogspot.com

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