Widder is working on a third - generation unit that will offer better mapping of
the distribution patterns of light.
Not exact matches
Future studies should continue to reveal large - scale
patterns of distribution and perhaps shed more
light on the origins
of mass extinctions and the effects
of these catastrophes on the evolution
of new species.
But the MIT researchers were able to show that, no matter how thick the fog, the arrival times
of the reflected
light adhere to a statistical
pattern known as a gamma
distribution.
The study used data from the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey, or BOSS, an Earth - based sky survey that captured
light from about 1.5 million galaxies to study the universe's expansion and the
patterned distribution of matter in the universe set in motion by the propagation
of sound waves, or «baryonic acoustic oscillations,» rippling in the early universe.
In this case, the
pattern is a variable series
of keystrokes that represent dark &
light, but the
distribution is forever uneven in its repetition since it is applied to a representation
of an object.
Which is why
light manifests in the form it does, because in order to be perceived, it must journey, and in ding so, removes one straight line vector
of motion, from within the shape
of jitter, which is the
distribution pattern of electron orbits, and becomes perceived as the wave
pattern we see it as.