"Equilibrium" refers to a state of balance or stability in which opposing forces or factors are evenly matched, resulting in a calm and steady situation.
Full definition
Many communities are reaching similar states
of equilibrium in the supply and demand for dogs.
The skeletal architecture becomes a drawing in space, in
equilibrium between the idea and the material.
Also, it diagnoses only one measure of climate change (
equilibrium response of global mean surface temperature).
This only adds to the stress of black professional women who are often focused on
maintaining equilibrium at home and in their communities.
The myth probably arises from the very early days of
equilibrium change runs, where the ocean heat sink effect did not apply.
Then again it may prove exceedingly difficult to ever create a workable unified theory of far from
equilibrium conditions.
If a system is only in local
energy equilibrium then different parts of the system can have different amounts of energy.
Capital accumulation and taxation in a general
equilibrium model with risky human capital.
It took millions of years for the seas to soak up this oxygen, but eventually they came
into equilibrium with the atmosphere.
Less sellers, more buyers, that's a double effect shifting the market
equilibrium price for second hand cars.
Rather than stop there, we can take positive action in our lives to reverse this stress and
restore equilibrium in our bodies and our minds.
In our
general equilibrium model of residential location and community choice, households base optimizing decisions on commuting costs, school quality, and land rents.
So while a mature forest is in
chemical equilibrium with the atmosphere, coral reefs form permanent limestone structures that keep on taking carbon out of the air forever.
In this regard there is no invisible hand that brings
about equilibrium between supply and demand.
But this is unrealistic, as
achieving equilibrium requires continual adjustment that flows with the life changes that happen along the way.
It would increase rapidly at first, with the temperature increase slowing over time
until equilibrium was reached.
Also could you tell me if the increase in temperature
towards equilibrium is expected to be linear.
Normally it's understood to take many hundreds of years for climate to reach
equilibrium after a doubling of CO2.
Once we stop trying to chase after something elusive and gain perspective on how we are actually living our lives, I think more people will find a daily
equilibrium which works for them.
Are there any climate scientists who think a return to
equilibrium means a return to exactly the same state?
Phrases with «equilibrium»