Sentences with phrase «equation for nearly»

This is the perfect equation for nearly all ebooks being read by more women than men.

Not exact matches

Truth is once you take LM, CR and LS out of the equation you can put nearly every other striker out there in the 0.4 — 0.5 range for league goals with the best in that range getting 10 goals more than the bottom of the range forward over 100 league matches ie: just over 3 extra a season.
For nearly a century, theorists have attempted to come up with a single model and a single set of equations that melds the two views of physics.
DISCOVER asked David Bodanis — a former Oxford University lecturer, trend consultant for BMW, author of E = mc2: A Biography of the World's Most Famous Equation, and motormouth who talks at nearly the speed of light — to investigate the pace of innovation these days in America.
The flow of a fluid, for example, is governed by a set of equations which physicists have understood for nearly two centuries.
The programs announced today were selected from a deep pool of nearly 100 applicants and after a rigorous six - month undertaking based in part on Design Principles for Effective Philanthropy created by Change the Equation, a coalition of U.S. CEOs committed to improving education in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM).
This is a coincidence and you are only analyzing over the thirty year satellite era but viewing your Adjusted GISS LOTI data for 60S - 60N with Secondary Volcano Adjustment in figure 28, the rate I noticed given in the equation of 1/4 ºC / century matches nearly exactly what you get in the trend of the 350 year long record kept in good old central England with little Pacific influence.
Assuming that u ¯ PBL and u ¯ are normally distributed with nearly vanishing densities at zero, the distribution density for their ratio s is given by the following equation (see, e.g., ref.
N&Z, for example, in their «unified climate theory» claim that their «miracle equation» predicts the temperature as a function of surface pressure nearly perfectly.
Nearly all of the equations in physics are approximations, and those used in climate science that I have seen to date are all based on some simplifications (equilibrium, for example; or ignoring the fact that 22 % if incoming TOA radiation is absorbed in the upper atmosphere.)
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