What makes it singular is the finesse needed to keep the lasers stable and to
detect tiny changes in their wavelengths.
«Studying these fingerprints in detail requires very precise measurements of the wavelength, or colour, of the light emerging from the atmospheres of these stars» says Dr Matthew Bainbridge, who has been working on the detailed analysis techniques needed to
detect the tiny changes expected.
So far, the skin is capable of
detecting these tiny changes across a range of temperatures roughly between 5 to 50 degrees Celsius (about 41 to 158 degrees Fahrenheit), which is useful for robotics and biomedical applications.
Scientists have developed a highly sensitive sensor to
detect tiny changes in strong magnetic fields.
To
detect this tiny change, women must use a basal body thermometer.
Not exact matches
A copper coil surrounding the sample
detected changes to the superconductor's magnetic properties and allowed the team to sensitively measure
tiny variations in how deep the magnetic field reached inside the superconductor.
One interactive display transforms a steel pedestrian bridge into a musical instrument, using sensors to
detect the
tiny vibrations from your footsteps and
change them into a symphony as you walk.
Nonetheless, scientists hope to measure this
tiny difference using instruments that can
detect changes of less than an attometre (one million million millionth of a metre).
In a sign of the method's power, Pritchard's team also
detected selection in traits controlled not by a single gene, but by
tiny changes in hundreds of genes.
The result brings the
tiny flakes, called nanocrystals, a crucial step closer to fulfilling their promise of tailoring a laser's color just by
changing the size of the crystal, which could lead to more powerful tools for
detecting chemicals or sending information via flickers of light.
The technique exploits quantum effects in
tiny diamond crystals, or «nanodiamonds», to
detect changes down to a few thousandths of a degree.
Its instruments will
detect incredibly
tiny changes in the distance between the cubes caused by gravitational waves.
Kepler's greatest advantage is its ability to
detect and measure
tiny changes in starlight.
Dogs, boasting about 300 million scent receptors per nose, can
detect tiny chemical
changes in the human body that signal cancer or diabetes faster than laboratory results, NaturalNews.com and TrueActivist.com reported recently.