To the answer — They are
as the physicist describes them and that is all that can be said.
Not exact matches
Piotr Malecki, Karol Wojtyla's altar boy at St. Florian's parish and the self -
described «enfant terrible» of that network of Wojtyla's friends known
as Srodowisko, is a distinguished
physicist.
Instead, the search for a unifying theory (what many
physicists might
describe as a search for «truth») dominates the discipline's most cutting - edge work.
DE: I would like to know what Jonathan would say about putting the «secondary qualities» back into nature,
as termini in sense - awareness of a process that
physicists describe in terms of vibrations and so on.
ER stands for Einstein and Rosen, the two
physicists who wrote the seminal paper
describing wormholes (otherwise known
as Einstein - Rosen bridges).
Physicist and Nobelist Serge Haroche
describes using a mirrored box to trap photons to spy on them
as they bounce around inside.This Nature Video was produced with support from Mars, Incorporated.
Coffee percolation is a familiar metaphor for
physicists, one that is used to
describe how physical turbulence behaves
as it spreads.
Paul Ewart, an atomic and optical
physicist at Oxford,
describes himself
as «pessimistic» about finding God hidden within the uncertainty principle, with or without chaos to lend a helping hand.
As described here, these advances create opportunities for neurobiologists as well as physicists and chemist
As described here, these advances create opportunities for neurobiologists
as well as physicists and chemist
as well
as physicists and chemist
as physicists and chemists.
► In this week's Science Careers - produced Working Life column, Richard Dasheiff
describes his transformation from aspiring
physicist to clinical neurologist via several decades
as a physician scientist.
Devised by Austrian
physicist Erwin Schrödinger in 1925, it
describes subatomic particles and how they may display wavelike properties such
as interference.
Physicist Banesh Hoffman, Einstein's collaborator and biographer, aptly
described him
as «creator and rebel.»
Physicists have calculated that the centre of the Earth is two - and - a-half years younger than its surface, thanks to the effects of gravity
as described by general relativity.
Ever since the 1940s,
physicists have
described the movement of slender structures through fluids — such
as a jump rope through air —
as a flat plane whose speed is limited by drag.
Described by a spokesperson from NASA's Astrobiology Institute
as «a revolution that will require its own revolution,» astrobiology draws on the expertise of astronomers and biologists,
physicists, chemists, and geologists to understand the development of life in the universe.
This is, however, far from a complete explanation, and the Nobel prizewinning
physicist Richard Feynman
described the result
as the «central mystery» of quantum physics.
More than 130 years ago, British
physicist and engineer Osborne Reynolds
described fluid flowing at low speeds
as «laminar,» meaning it flows smoothly in a single direction, and fluid flowing at high speeds
as «turbulent,» meaning it experiences chaotic changes in pressure and energy.
As described by the legendary
physicist John Archibald Wheeler, «Mass grips spacetime, telling it how to curve.
Physicists describe light
as both a particle and a wave.
Physicist Arjun Makhijani of the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research
described the license extension
as quote «not consistent with safety.»
Now
physicists at MIT have found another unusual phenomenon produced by the Dirac cone: It can spawn a phenomenon
described as a «ring of exceptional points.»
As far back as 1867, physicist James Clerk Maxwell described a hypothetical way to violate the Second Law: if a small theoretical being sat at the door between the hot and cold rooms and only let through particles traveling at a certain spee
As far back
as 1867, physicist James Clerk Maxwell described a hypothetical way to violate the Second Law: if a small theoretical being sat at the door between the hot and cold rooms and only let through particles traveling at a certain spee
as 1867,
physicist James Clerk Maxwell
described a hypothetical way to violate the Second Law: if a small theoretical being sat at the door between the hot and cold rooms and only let through particles traveling at a certain speed.
A number of
physicists, including Stephen Hawking and Lawrence Krauss, have angered philosophers by
describing philosophy
as useless.
The Kondo effect, first
described last century by the Japanese
physicist Jun Kondo, is observed when magnetic impurities, i.e., very few atoms (even only 1 in 1000) of magnetic material such
as iron are added to metals like gold or copper.
One of those
physicists is Andreas Rathke, a former research fellow at the European Space Agency, who is
described on the agency's website
as having «debunked a high number of crackpots.»
He also says it is «completely wrong» to
describe,
as the research teams do, the chain of magnetism within spin ices
as a Dirac string, a hypothetical invisible tether with a monopole at its end that was envisioned in the 1930s by English
physicist Paul Dirac.
He also asserts that it is «completely wrong» to
describe,
as the researchers do, the chain of magnetism within spin ices
as a Dirac string, a hypothetical invisible tether with a monopole at its end that was envisioned in the 1930s by English
physicist Paul Dirac.
Perhaps it is because of the disquieting features of all of these interpretations that noted
physicist Richard Feynman
described the double - slit experiment
as the true mystery of quantum mechanics.
The RHIC
physicists describe their creation
as a near «perfect» fluid, one that has extremely low internal friction, or viscosity.
Vlatko Vedral — a
physicist who whimsically
describes himself
as being quantum superimposed at both the University of Oxford in the U.K. and the Centre for Quantum Technologies in Singapore — took notice.
In fact, the new results raise the prospect that the only new thing that the $ 5.5 billion LHC will produce will be the standard model Higgs boson, an outcome some
physicists have
described as their nightmare scenario.
I would suggest that there is an insurmountable hurdle to
physicist Dirk Helbing's work,
described by Weinberger, in trying to make a «computing system that would effectively serve
as the world's crystal ball»: the discrete architecture of the natural world.
Some of the greatest
physicists have
described these results
as so confounding they are impossible to comprehend fully, beyond the reach of metaphor, visualization, and language itself.
The six benchmarks are: 1) HDR brachytherapy procedures are supported with the appropriate team
as described in the report of the AAPM TG 59 and the American College of Radiology HDR Brachytherapy Practice Standard; 2) commissioning of the treatment unit, treatment planning system and each new source is performed by a qualified medical
physicist and verified through a QA process; 3) assay of the HDR brachytherapy unit source is performed using a well - type ionization chamber with a calibration traceable to the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and this assay is performed or confirmed for each source change.
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratorys particle
physicists have created an accessible, entertaining primer on,
as they
describe it, what the world is made of and what holds it together.
Physicists often
describe the fabric of the universe we inhabit
as four - dimensional spacetime, comprising three dimensions of space and one of time.
The parallel between the needs of dual - career couples and the problem
as described by
physicists is striking.
Mathematicians,
physicists, philosophers and others debate that question,
as astrophysicist Mario Livio
describes in the August issue of Scientific American.
The nature of dark matter — which
physicists describe as the invisible component or so - called «missing mass» in the universe that would explain the faster - than - expected spins of galaxies, and their motion in clusters observed across the universe — has eluded scientists since its existence was deduced through calculations by Swiss astronomer Fritz Zwicky in 1933.
«So, the question was whether lithium will have the same effect on tungsten walls
as it does with carbon walls,» said PPPL
physicist Rajesh Maingi, lead author with Jiansheng Hu of the Institute of Plasma Physics at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (ASIPP) of a paper
describing the results in the journal Nuclear Fusion.
Some of the greatest
physicists have
described it
as impossible to intuit and impossible to formulate into words, and
as invalidating common sense and ordinary perception.
Certification is a way to mark the achievements of clinical medical
physicists who have fulfilled the requirements in education and training
as described in the IOMP Policy Statements No. 1 and 2.
Australian mathematical
physicist Ian Enting, author of the Australian Mathematical Sciences Institute book Twisted: The distorted mathematics of greenhouse denial, has analysed the book,
describing it
as being characterised by «half - truths and slanted misrepresentation» and «appalling hypocrisy.»
Physicist and educator Dr. James Wanliss speaks on how science is often abused
as a political tool, rather than appreciated for what it is: a powerful method to
describe how our world works.
As eminent
physicist Freeman Dyson says, «Models do a very poor job of
describing the clouds, the dust, the chemistry and the biology of fields, farms and forests.»
And being in alignment with the needs of the universe,
as physicist David Bohm
described, allows the «operants» of the holographic universe to simply work in your favor.