An oversized free - floating planet formed
by agglomeration would not have a disk, explains Lada, so these dwarfs must have formed like stars.
By agglomeration is meant things like the IPCC AR meta analyses, or policy statement by the APS or the NRC on climate.
Some view the European integration as a supranational entity shaped
by the agglomeration of its continental nation States, a peculiar form of a federative State, similar to the idea of a United (Nation --RRB- States of Europe.
Not exact matches
Many people trace the intensification of religious bigotry in Glasgow between the wars to the importing of Belfast shipyard workers during World War I. Belfast is the headquarters of the Orange movement, the
agglomeration of fanatically anti-Catholic «lodges» committed to preserving the memory and significance of the victory won
by William of Orange over the dethroned Catholic James II of Britain on the banks of the Boyne north of Dublin in 1690.
An «
agglomeration of foodies and educational reformers who are propelled
by a vacuous if well - meaning ideology» — in other words,
by unexamined assumptions that spending time in school gardens will give children a better chance at getting an education and a high - school diploma.
The
agglomeration of copper or silver atoms in a matrix of noble gas atoms to form small clusters may be accompanied
by the emission of visible light.
An urban area, or urban
agglomeration, was defined as a built - up area of a central city and any suburbs or small cities that were linked together
by continuous urban land.
By explicitly measuring the urban density (persons per kilometre) change for each
agglomeration, the researchers showed that, contrary to previous findings, urban growth has outpaced land expansion.
Economists have suggested polycentrism is driven
by business
agglomeration — the idea that companies are more successful when they are clustered.
An event that started as a few days of local jam bands in 1987 Austin, Texas has grown to The South
By Southwest Conference and Festivals (affectionately known as SXSW, or just «South
By»), one of the largest and rangiest
agglomerations of entertainment on the planet: over a week of film screenings, seminars, concerts, comedy, and gaming and tech demos.
To come up with the ranking, we gathered information on Census Metropolitan Areas (CMA) and Census
Agglomeration (CA) areas as defined
by Statistics Canada.
The nagging feeling that this
agglomeration of peeling paint, poured plaster, oozing resin, splintered wood and crayoned rags was destined for the metaphorical dustbin was reinforced
by the contrast the next day at Sotheby's and Christie's tandem viewings of upcoming sales of contemporary art, which offered gorgeous works
by Rothko, Richter, Bacon, Twombly, Kelly, Diebenkorn, Polke — on and on — that left most of the Frieze offerings in the dust.
Her
agglomerations of junk and rubbish proceed, like Brown's work,
by an intuitive process of ordering that, once identified, leaves one little the wiser.
He finishes
by adhering
agglomerations of plastic crystals and purple goop — a touch of kitsch for an otherwise kitsch - free installation.
One might ask, too, whether her
agglomerations of junk and rubbish were circumscribed
by the display conditions - the inevitable qualms about health and safety regulations - available at Tate Britain.
The ground level contains Kelley's canonized Deodorized Central Mass with Satellites, a room - filling installation of soiled stuffed animals suspended from the ceiling in celestial
agglomerations, surrounded
by brightly colored, wall - mounted canisters that periodically release a deodorizing spray.
Three decades of sculptures
by Hassan Sharif — colourful
agglomerations of banal objects with coils of rope, elastic and rubber tubing — sit in the following gallery on shelves that could have been borrowed from the artist's studio, or a supermarket aisle.
Inspired
by megacities of South Asia and areas seen as on google maps, Czakainski create abstract shapes and forms, resembling urban
agglomerations.
Since the 1990s the work of Brazilian artist Adriana Varejão has been centered on how heritage in her home country is structured
by extensive
agglomerations of people, culture and civilizations from across the planet.
You can contemplate her earliest works, a perfect
agglomeration of sexual body parts accompanied
by lots of melons breasts, fried - eggs breasts, kippers, kebabs, raw chickens and a pair of Spanish hams conjoined with underpants and supine on a grease - stained mattress.
It is not clear (at least to me) whether the problem is the actual practice of science, it's «
agglomeration» in various guises for various purposes, or the impressions left on non-scientists
by MSM reporting on the «
agglomerations».
You're complaining about what was described in the main post above: «efforts made
by Robert Rohde on the dataset
agglomeration and the statistical approach» — because you don't like the result.
This has been primarily driven
by general wealth
agglomeration and gain in market share.
This effect is identified
by economist Efraim Benmelech in the paper «The
Agglomeration of Bankruptcy.»