Sentences with phrase «hole in the centre of»

-- Take an apple corer and make a hole in the centre of the cupcakes.
Spoon the ice cream into a serving bowl that will fit into the hole in the centre of the doughnut.
Use a knife to cut hole in centre of each doughnut if required 8.
Make a hole in the centre of each ball and insert a teaspoon of the olive caper mix.
Who comes in — Elneny was an inspired signing that seals the holes in the centre of the park.
Gas clouds that fall into the centre of merged pairs of galaxies could feed black holes in the centres of galaxies.
FRB 121102 could come from a bright region around a black hole in the centre of its host galaxy that spews radio waves as it vaporises gas and plasma.
They're an expected outcome of the evolution of stars within a certain mass range), and there may well be a supermassive black hole in the centre of our galaxy.
The astrophysicist is being honored by the UK academy for her «acclaimed discoveries... on the motions and nature of the stars orbiting the black hole in the centre of our Galaxy.»
The organization, the oldest scientific academy in continuous existence, cited Ghez's «acclaimed discoveries using the techniques of optical astronomy, especially her sustained work on the motions and nature of the stars orbiting the black hole in the centre of our Galaxy.»
It is a huge domed building of equal height and width with a large hole in the centre of the roof to let in light and air.
You see, Jerry has in his possession a magic ring, and if he looks through the hole in the centre of the ring it allows him to see all the wonders of the world.
You are like a fine Henry Moore bronze; robust, smooth and with a few holes in the centre of your art history knowledge.
Chop a small macerated marinated fig in half and insert the fig in a hole in the centre of each hamburger.
Punch a hole in the centre of each paper case so you can slip a straw through — you can even personalise them with people's names.
Use your hands to make a hole in the centre of the wreath and place the spool of floral wire in the centre (leave it there for now).

Not exact matches

Nk» Mip Cellars, which opened in 2002, was the second phase of a $ 25 - million Nk» Mip project that includes a seasonal outdoor restaurant located in the winery, a campground and RV park, an interpretive centre, an 18 - hole championship golf course and a high - end resort and spa.
There's no difference if there was a super giant star in the centre of the galaxy gravitationally speaking, a black hole's gravitational pull is proportional to its mass, which is estimated at around 4 million solar masses.
Use the nozzle to make a hole in the side of each doughnut and pipe a generous amount of filling into the centre.
In this pattern, the «Bergkamp hole» is a shared duty with Sanchez doing the left side of the role and Ozil doing the right side meaning they are both in the centre of the field where they are very capable and will harass any defensIn this pattern, the «Bergkamp hole» is a shared duty with Sanchez doing the left side of the role and Ozil doing the right side meaning they are both in the centre of the field where they are very capable and will harass any defensin the centre of the field where they are very capable and will harass any defense.
From a «hole in the ground» to «soaring with Eagles», time spent at Aillwee Cave & Bird of Prey Centre is exceedingly enjoyed by all.
The pair were holed up in the upstairs gym of the Windrush Leisure Centre in Witney, Oxon, watching the map of England turn Tory blue on a giant TV screen.
Different theories exist to explain the source of these middleweights, but some astronomers believe they grow from the mergers of stars and black holes in the densely packed centres of collections of stars called globular clusters.
A computer simulation of two black holes merging into one created recently by scientists at the University of Texas and the Theoretical Astrophysics Centre in Copenhagen should provide them with a detailed idea of what type of gravity waves to expect.
Singularities can also serve as seeds of destruction, lurking in the centres of black holes, the final endpoints of total gravitational collapse.
There are at least two species of black holes — smaller ones in orbit with a normal star, and their larger brethren which lurk in the centre of galaxies.
It points back to the centre of the galaxy, so the huge black hole thought to exist there may have hurled the star out (The Astrophysical Journal Letters, in press).
Astronomers generally agree that enormous black holes lurk at the centre of most galaxies, and have identified plausible candidates in many galaxies, including the neighbouring dwarf galaxy M32 — and our own Milky Way.
Most astronomers believe that a quasar is a massive black hole at the centre of a galaxy, greedily sucking in stars and gas, which become so hot that they give off tremendous amounts of energy.
Such a process takes place over a very long time (tens to hundreds of millions of years), and is capable to turn a small black hole created in the explosion of a heavy star into the super-heavyweight monsters that lurk at the centre of galaxies.
This composite image shows the motion of the dusty cloud G2 as it closes in on, and then passes, the supermassive black hole at the centre of the Milky Way.
Supermassive black holes are thought to reside in the centres of all galaxies.
«If there are many axion stars in the centres, we expect that some of them collide with the black hole accretion disc,» says Iwazaki.
«In the first instance we resolve the problem of the singularity, since there is a door at the centre of the black hole, the wormhole, through which space and time can continue.»
«If Ono has a really new way of characterising a mock modular form then surely it will have implications for our work,» says Atish Dabholkar, who studies black holes at the French National Centre for Scientific Research in Paris.
While there is little to «see» in the usual sense of that word, our galactic centre is home to a black hole more than...
Most scientists are sure that in the centre of our galaxy there is a supermassive black hole; there are binary systems where one of the components is most likely a black hole.
The first clue that supermassive black holes exist was the discovery several decades ago of quasars — extremely bright objects in the centres of distant galaxies.
Working with Chris Willott at the Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics in Victoria, Canada, and Douglas Pierce - Price of the Joint Astronomy Centre in Hawaii, McLure and Jarvis have now applied the new technique to the most distant supermassive black hole known, in the quasar SDSS J1148 +5251.
They found that massive stars in MGG 11 — home to the midsize black hole candidate — reached the centre of the cluster in three million years, while those in the other cluster took 15 million years.
Black holes with masses of millions or even a billion Suns are commonly found in the centres of galaxies.
The black hole at the centre of our Galaxy is far less massive than previously thought, claims an astronomer in the US.
Simulations have long suggested that many smaller black holes, with masses close to the sun's, also exist in the centres of galaxies including the Milky Way, but only one has ever been found.
Gradually slowing down, the two black holes should spiral in towards the centre of the galaxy and eventually merge.
This snowballing effect would occur in the centres of young, dense star clusters, producing a black hole when the accumulated stars explode and die.
In 2011 ESO's Very Large Telescope (VLT) discovered a gas cloud with several times the mass of Earth accelerating towards the black hole at the centre of the Milky Way [1].
The study of the supermassive black hole at the centre of the galaxy and its environment is rated number one in the list of ESO's top ten astronomical discoveries.
They found that the rays seemed to concentrate in «hotspots» in the vicinity of particular galaxies, suggesting that they might originate in the overheated matter surrounding supermassive black holes at the galaxies» centres.
Tine holds a PhD degree in marine science / micropaleontogy from the University of Aarhus in Denmark, and has professional experience from the Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ, the Netherlands), the University of Copenhagen (Denmark), Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (USA), Lund University (Sweden) and The University Centre in Svalbard (UNIS, Spitsbergen).
Such a process takes place over a very long time (tens to hundreds of millions of years), and is capable of turning a small black hole created in the explosion of a heavy star into the super-heavyweight monsters that lurk at the centre of galaxies.
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