Sentences with phrase «classical theory»

In other words, the flux rule consists of two physically different laws in classical theories.
Before quantum physics, our understanding was governed by classical theories in which reality exists regardless of observers.
With experience of undertaking modules in a diverse range of subjects, she has acquired exceptional knowledge of contemporary and classical theories which include philosophy, history, cultural studies, film and literature.
Early modern theory is the period after classical theory.
The evaluated models will be used for predicting the different services soil renders to ecosystems in a dynamic way and for testing classical theory, where soil structure is not directly taken into account.
The model is assuming classical theory rather than quantum theory.
Other aspects of guppy ecology were consistent with classical theories.
Classical theory encompasses the ancient Greeks, Romans, and Christian political theory.
Munich researchers now combine two competing classical theories of magnitude estimates.
According to Lang, evolutionary biology has a rich history, with many classical theories still in need of experimental tests.
Making sense of the «big data» that is now ubiquitous in biology requires the development of innovative new quantitative tools and techniques, grounded in classical theory yet adapted for powerful modern technologies.
Classical theory indicates that it will be about 1.1 deg C (2 deg F).
«This phenomenon is impossible in classical theories of electromagnetism; hence this result provides a sensitive test of our understanding of QED, the quantum theory of electromagnetism.»
The simulations revealed that these bubbles emerge in a way that is well - predicted by classical theories, but that the bubble formation also competes with attempts by the glass to reshuffle its atoms to release the stress applied to a particular location.
Adlai enjoys the challenge of arranging band or orchestral music for solo guitar, drawing from his formal training in classical theory and composition.
The global depression of the 1930s raised serious questions about this classical theory.
As Ole Bjerg points out in Making Money, a recent excursion into the philosophy of money, the classical theory leaves some puzzles in its wake.
It encompasses earlier, classical theories (which are generally very accurate for the domains to which they apply).
Classical theories of causation are unable to explain how a cause can have such an abiding influence on its effects.
For example, at the center of a black hole, according to classical theory, the density is infinite (because a finite mass is compressed to a zero volume).
During the later ages of classical theory, social classes were often thought to be divinely ordained.
This energy is enough to generate the Earth's magnetic field, which together with the Moon, resolves the major paradox in the classical theory.
The formation of such ordered superstructures and the associated interfacial reconstructions that change the 2 - D translational symmetries at both terminating grain planes, which had been thought impossible to be realized at general grain boundaries that should be lacking a long - range translational symmetry according to the classical theories in physical metallurgy, are enabled by faceting, as well as the formation of atomic - level steps at the grain boundaries.
In quantum mechanics, interactions between particles can give rise to entanglement, which is a strange type of connection that could never be described by a non-quantum, classical theory.
This relationship supports the classical theory of aging, and remains valid when other life history traits known to influence longevity such as body mass and clutch size are included into the statistical model.
The classical theory is based on the idea that the eggs a woman has are the ones she has had from birth, but there are researchers who claim that stem cell research could lead to the creation of new eggs.
To conclude, altogether these observations revise the classical theory of enzymatic catalysis by including long - lasting protein - water coupled motions into models of functional catalysis.
The classical theory of electromagnetism was completed in the 1860s by James Clerk Maxwell.
This classical theory can then be adapted to become a relativistic theory by adding in the requirement of special relativity, that the speed of light is both an absolute constant and an upper speed limit.
According to the classical theory of crystallization, calcium carbonate nuclei form spontaneously and then fall apart until they reach a critical size, after which they serve as nucleation clusters that can grow into crystals.
Unlike nearly all his contemporaries, Albert Einstein thought quantum mechanics would give way to a classical theory.
In any case, «The classical theory of nucleation has turned out to be off - target by several orders of magnitude in some systems when it comes [to] quantitative predictions.»
This fractal distributiondirectly follows from the classical theory of turbulence developed by the Soviet mathematician Andrey Kolmogorov.
Classical theory of mantle plume is put in question: New insights from South Africa.»
Animals from waters with guppy - hungry predators aged more slowly than did fish from pools cut off from predators by waterfalls — an apparent contradiction of the classical theory.
This allowed them to make very specific predictions that are different from those produced by classical theory and should make it possible to validate the new model experimentally within a year, Yildiz says.
LSU Department of Physics & Astronomy Assistant Professor Ivan Agullo's new research advances knowledge of a classical theory of electromagnetism.
Detailed 3D X-ray images of the saw - like nose of Schizorhiza stromeri challenge the classical theory that vertebrate teeth evolved from external scales.
The very nature of the quantum theory... forces us to regard the space - time coordination and the claim of causality, the union of which characterizes the classical theories, as complementary but exclusive features of the description, symbolizing the idealization of observation and description, respectively.
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