Sentences with phrase «about ordinary matters»

Being thoughtful about ordinary matters provides spouses with a solid foundation for resolving conflict when it does occur and finding strategies for living with those issues that can not be resolved.
It's not part of the «standard model» of physics that weaves together everything that is known about ordinary matter and its interactions.57

Not exact matches

The beginning of a shift of attention to these matters has come about because persons concerned for the preservation of forests have also been concerned that ordinary people should be able to cook their food.
Every Ordinary Matter Object in this Universe is surrounded by Dark Matter about 10 times its mass!
Yet he has the same ability as Thatcher and Tebbitt to talk to ordinary people in a way that is both powerful and persuasive about difficult issues that really matter.
According to the latest theories and observations, the universe has about six times as much dark matter as the atomic matter that makes up our ordinary world.
In their simulations, Gao and Theuns found that within clumps of cold dark matter, single massive stars formed, but warm dark matter formed filaments about a quarter the width of the Milky Way, attracting enough ordinary matter to create some 10 million stars — and some of these very first stars could still be around.
As the universe expanded, such collisions would become ever rarer and, given the strength of the weak force, just enough WIMPs would survive to provide the right amount of dark matter today — about five times that of ordinary matter.
In fact, it outweighs ordinary matter by about five to one.
Although we can see dark matter's gravitational effects on stars and galaxies, it does not otherwise interact with ordinary matter, and we know frustratingly little about its properties.
However, telescopes had never seen about half of the ordinary matter.
Over the past decade, evidence has mounted that only about one sixth of the matter in the universe is the ordinary baryonic matter with which we are familiar.
A Universe that contains about 60 per cent cold dark matter, 30 per cent hot dark matter, probably in the form of low - mass «tau» neutrinos, and 10 per cent in ordinary (baryonic) particles like protons and neutrons, seems to fit all the observations.
This and several other lines of evidence point to the existence of a mysterious form of invisible matter that exerts a gravitational influence on other matter and outweighs ordinary matter by a factor of about 6 to 1.
But our models of the universe also say there should be about twice as much ordinary matter out there, compared with what we have observed so far.
However, stars and galaxies account for only about 10 % of the inferred ordinary matter, and all told researchers can not account for up to half of atoms they think should exist.
And now, we have established that dark matter is about 23 percent of the universe; ordinary matter is only 4 1/2 percent; and dark energy is that other 73 percent — which is an even bigger puzzle.
But not enough: Galaxies should have about three times as much ordinary matter as astronomers see.
The potential revelations include details about objects both ordinary, such as stars, and exotic, such as dark - matter particles, that CMB photons might encounter on their travels through space.
In contrast, ordinary matter makes up only about 15 percent of the mass of the universe.
Although ordinary individuals may have no duty to go beyond their own personal opinion about the science of climate change, government officials who have the power to enact policies that could present catastrophic harm to millions of people around the world may not as a matter of ethics justify their refusal to support policies to reduce the threat of climate change on the basis of their uninformed opinions on climate science.
One notes how infotainting Norm Kalmanovitch is with his nine - year long view of climate, which manages in half the length of time that signal can be separated from noise in the already questionable surface temperature record by ordinary mathematics and a demand for predictions about inherently unpredictable matters to come to an ironclad conclusion that happens to coincide with his own biased views.
The reason I am writing about this is that while ordinary litigants, who go to court to assert or defend their own legal rights and interests, are perfectly entitled not to care about what the public knows about their cases, it seems to me that public interest litigants, who ostensibly pursue matters not on their own behalf but on that of the public at large or at least of some section of the public, are, in my view, in a different position.
If you are applying for an ordinary driver's license, you will get the examination about the matter; while those who want to become commercial drivers will also get another set of lessons for the test.
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