Sentences with phrase «at immense speed»

For over three years, the scientists have been collecting data on the flight of neutrinos — those mysterious, nearly massless particles that can travel through anything at immense speed — originating in the SPS accelerator at CERN, near Geneva, and traveling underground all the way to Gran Sasso, 731 kilometers (about 450 miles) away.
The feeling of being strapped into a cockpit, hurtling through space at immense speeds, is a visceral one.

Not exact matches

Sagittarius A *'s immense gravity is accelerating the cloud dramatically: in 2004, the cloud was hurtling toward the black hole at 1200 kilometers per second; by 2011, the speed had nearly doubled, reaching 2350 kilometers per second.
The result is immense turn - in agility and a frankly astonishing economy of input required to blast across these wet, freezing roads at breakneck speed.
At the instant the chain tightens, the car in back would go from zero to the speed of the car in front instantly, causing a very uncomfortable jerk, and putting an immense amount of force on the parts attached to the chain.
A subtle rear spoiler at the trunk lid's trailing edge also enhances high - speed stability, but what really gives this nearly three - ton automobile its immense poise is a revised suspension that features 57 percent more roll stiffness than the Red Label.
By giving the chassis as much grip as possible, the driver can control the drift with immense precision to adjust the car at speed.
Now because it's softly sprung (which gives it immense ability to absorb bumps at low speeds), there is slightly more vertical movement than we would have liked at high speeds, but it's no deal breaker.
The immense levels of torque at all engine speeds neutralize its substantial curb mass and a mere prod of the throttle will have the large coupe pressing you into the plush leather seats.
The most powerful diesel implemented in a Porsche production car to date develops a power of 310 kW / 422 hp (at 3,500 rpm) and an immense maximum torque of 850 Nm — which is constant over an engine speed plateau extending from 1,000 to 3,250 rpm.
Imagine what people would say if a band of hunters strung a mile of net between two immense all - terrain vehicles and dragged it at speed across the plains of Africa.
That tells me there is immense interest in this topic as the publishing landscape changes at ever increasing speed.
The thrill of travelling across the map at high speeds while trying to maneuver your way behind the enemy fliers to take them out while also trying to keep yourself alive is immense.
There's an immense amount of pop - in, both texture - based and enemy - based, when travelling at high - speeds later in the game (pop - in is when things that should have been there when you arrived suddenly materialise on - screen without warning because the game couldn't handle you approaching there that quickly — which can sometimes be an enemy that absolutely ruins you out of nowhere like a Randy Orton short video) but, to its credit in this case, there's no actual slowdown.
If you are lucky enough to own a surround - sound headset you are in for a real treat — from the roar of 24 engines at the start of a race to tyres doing all they can to stay on the track as you speed around corners — the noise is always immense, the musical score is superb too.
Her «work process and focus on a synthetic quality — amplified at a large scale» continues to «imbue a sense of ease and spontaneity from a distance, yet at closer view, captures the immense abstraction of speed, density, and signal that traverse space and time.»
They called carbon dioxide, and oxygen and nitrogen, «ideal gases», and said they behave as per basic ideal gas description (pre Van der Waals), in other words, they have taken all the properties and process of real gases out of their «gases» and reduced them to hard dots with no mass, (no volume, weight or attraction and therefore nothing to be subject to gravity), and they say these travel at great speeds through empty space as per ideal gas, bouncing off each other in elastic collisions and so «thoroughly mixing» that they can't be unmixed (without an immense amount of work being done, so for all practical purposes can not be unmixed).
«This heroic campaign shall be carried out on a vast scale, transforming our economy at wartime speed,» The Climate Mobilization writes, because «climate change is causing immense human suffering and damage to the natural world.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z