Sentences with phrase «nc1 small nucleus»

New churches, schools and Catholic institutions were constantly being opened, and the Catholic community was a vibrant one, the small nucleus of «Old Catholics» having been augmented by Anglican converts and Irish emigrants — from which groups came Francis Bourne's own family.
But I am quietly confident we have a small nucleus of quality that, when added to appropriately over the next several windows, will revive our fortunes.
In 1903 Nagaoka proposed a model of the atom that contained a small nucleus surrounded by a ring of electrons.
Most of the total Uranium - 235 breaks down into smaller nuclei during fission.
To determine whether defects in the mitochondrial dynamics of this small nucleus of POMC neurons could cause alterations in metabolism, researchers removed a mitochondrial dynamics protein, Mitofusin 1, from these cells in mice.
Even with the relatively small nucleus (compared, say, to Hale - Bopp's 1997's appearance, with its roughly 20 - mile, or 32 - kilometer, nucleus), Ison still had a whopping 80,000 - mile (120,000 - kilometer) coma.
From left to right: PN1 Penetrable (PN1 Penetrável), 1960; P34 White Painting (P34 Série branca), 1959; Untitled, ca. 1960; NC1 Small Nucleus 1 (NC1 Núcleo pequeno 1), 1960.

Not exact matches

But it could be the nucleus of a complete neighborhood, one which has a church community at its enter, and the potential to promote growth in an urban rather than suburban sprawl pattern (much as the most beautiful parts of contemporary London grew in the 17th and 18th centuries around small residential - square developments).
The three are part of a small bipartisan congressional nucleus that has actively opposed religious persecution for more than a decade.
Religion is so deep - seated a human interest that it can be snowed under but never completely stifled, and on every campus there is a nucleus of students — sometimes a good many, sometimes a small minority — who care about their faith.
Pagels (1984) points out that if the relative masses of protons and neutrons were different by a small fraction of 1 per cent, making the proton heavier than the neutron, hydrogen atoms would be unstable since the protons that constitute their nuclei would spontaneously decay into neutrons.
On the other hand, we read here several poems hardly distinguishable from the work of Second Isaiah; and we must conclude, therefore, that Isaiah 56 - 66 comes out of continuing Isaianic circles of prophetism surviving the sixth - century debacle, and had as its nucleus a small collection of Second Isaiah's oracles not incorporated in 40 - 55 and perhaps of somewhat later origin (see especially the three chapters, 60 - 62, and the Servant Song in 61:1 - 4).
SPHERE • • of the star collapsed into a singularity • • • • of the planets - and the atomic nucleus • • • • of The Planets by Gustav Holst, and the Harmony of the spheres • • • • of the very large and the very, very small coming together without beginning or end • •
The amygdala, the small group of nuclei critical to emotional learning, is the brain area that has been reported most often in studies regarding attitudes to race.
The two - century - old gun manufacturer Remington Arms, the nucleus of a small Mohawk Valley community, is losing jobs to a more gun - friendly state.
The tracks visible in these clouds off the coasts of France and Spain form when small, airborne sulfate particles emitted by ships and airplanes act as cloud condensation nuclei, or «seeds.»
All materials are made of small charged particles: nuclei and electrons.
The three laureates thought otherwise and over the years, using «a pair of gigantic laser interferometers to measure a change thousands of times smaller than an atomic nucleus, as the gravitational wave passed the Earth,» the LIGO project found success, the Nobel committee said.
Smaller «cometesimals» might loosely join to make a nucleus riddled with weak seams, or the whole thing could be a coherent icy dirt ball.
Because the nucleus is so small, these jets act like rocket engines, spinning up the comet's rotation, Jewitt said.
A small fraction will hit an atomic nucleus inside Super-Kamiokande and so create a distinctive flash of light.
Drawing on his data from the Hubble observations, Li estimates that the nucleus — the solid body of the comet itself — is no more than about 2.5 miles (4 kilometers) across, smaller than what many astronomers initially expected for such an energetic comet.
Although the comet's tail may ultimately stretch millions of kilometers through the solar system, its nucleus is likely smaller than New York's Central Park.
The MIT theoretical physicist uses supercomputers to simulate how parcels of matter far too small to be seen through a microscope bind together to form the nuclei of atoms.
An electron may have no meaningful property of size but could be thought of as 10 million times smaller than the nucleus.
Protons and neutrons cluster in a nucleus, 100,000 times smaller than its atom, and are themselves composed of other stupendously small things: quarks and gluons.
Your biological clock is regulated by two broad factors: first, the central rhythm is reset daily by light, as sensory input from the eyes is processed by a small part of the brain called the suprachiasmatic nucleus.
The exception is a small area in the hypothalamus, called posterodorsal preoptic nucleus, that is believed to control a single male - specific reproductive function (ejaculation).
«The icy small bodies warm up as they approach the Sun, and the ice sublimes to form a coma [a dense cloud of gas and dust particles around a nucleus] and often a tail, making the comets observable,» she explained.
Moreover, this material is then ejected and hardly contributes to the formation of the smaller bodies that form a new generation of comet nuclei.
For a monopole with twice the minimum charge, Rajantie and Gould determined that magnetic monopoles must be more massive than about 10 billion electron volts, going by data from collisions of lead nuclei in the Super Proton Synchrotron, a smaller accelerator at CERN.
A millisecond after the Big Bang occurred, neutrons and protons formed and began to fuse into small atomic nuclei.
With properly selected collision energies, a small portion of the Ni - 66 nuclei thus formed achieve a certain state with a deformed shape which, as measurements showed, proved to be slightly more stable than all other excited states associated with significant deformation.
Since the comet nucleus is very small, at a diameter of 4 kilometres, the summer zone is only about one kilometre away from the winter zone.
They live inside their host's cells and have highly specialized features: They are only able to reproduce inside the host's cells, they have the smallest known genome of all organisms with a cell nucleus (eukaryotes) and they posses no mitochondria of their own (the cell's power plant).
There, they calculated the so - called free energy cost for the formation of small ice crystal nuclei.
That's 3 times wider than Wirtanen's nucleus, but still small enough for a safe landing by the surface probe.
RNA messages are copies of small snippets of DNA that move out of the cell nucleus to be converted into proteins.
«We called it a nanocell because it looks like a nucleus and surrounding lipid structure, but it's significantly smaller than a cell,» Sengupta says.
«This experiment is remarkable because the magnetic forces created by the nuclei are millions of times smaller than the electrostatic forces that usually drive currents,» yet they were able to control currents, he says.
Histones are vitally important because our genetic material is vast: every cell in the body has more than six feet of DNA bundled within a tiny nucleus, a space much smaller than can be seen with the naked eye.
«If you ask a nucleus, they would tell you the cytoplasm is like honey, because they are really large and slow, and they don't feel cytoskeletal structures — they only feel the viscous disassembled protein solution, and have very small resistance,» Guo says.
«We have shown we can use room - temperature, plastic electronic devices that allow us to see the orientation of the tiniest magnets in nature — the spins in the smallest atomic nuclei,» says physics professor Christoph Boehme, one of the study's principal authors.
The wormhole predicted by the equations is smaller than an atomic nucleus, but gets bigger the bigger the charge stored in the black hole.
Comet Siding Spring's nucleus — a nugget of ice and rock measuring no more than half a kilometer (about 1/3 mile)-- is small, but the coma is expansive, stretching out a million kilometers (more than 600,000 miles) in every direction.
When Cox and colleagues infused oxytocin specifically into the nucleus accumbens, a small brain region implicated in drug addiction, they found that it had the same effects as when they administered it systemically.
«This process needs to start somewhere, and that would be with a nucleus, the smallest - size cluster that will then be able to finish the process and grow to macroscopic size.
The spatial elongation of nuclei in a vibration is much smaller than the distance between atoms, the latter being determined by the distribution of electrons.
It also allows us to look at protein complexes which are smaller than 200nm in the nucleus, which hasn't been done before.»
One way to control expression, he explains, is through microRNA, small pieces of noncoding genetic material that control whether a gene's protein is generated from the DNA blueprints inside cell nuclei.
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