Sentences with phrase «known particles like»

Such speedy particles are collectively referred to as «dark radiation» and include previously known particles like neutrinos.

Not exact matches

We have no idea what's causing this gravity, though — we haven't directly detected the theorized particles that make up this mysterious material that doesn't seem to interact (other than gravitationally) with normal matter like light and the particles that we know and love, which is what makes it invisible, and therefore «dark» to most instruments normally used to understand our universe.
fred likes the quantun physics argument, because most people don't even know what quantum mechanics deal with, which is mainly a mathematical description of much of the dual particle - like and wave - like behavior and interactions of energy and matter.
If you add to the number of particles that are being studied, eventually there will be enough particles that they no longer act quantum mechanically and must be identified as classical, just like our everyday world.
In the 1970s, physicists put all the known particles (including a few whose existence had not yet been confirmed, like the Higgs boson) and the forces that govern their interactions — the electromagnetic, weak and strong — into a single theoretical framework known as the Standard Model.
And like the well - known quantum behaviour of matter and energy, these bits of space - time would behave more like waves than particles.
«A particle like slow light: Particles known as «Weyl fermions» were discovered in materials with strong interaction between electrons.
Now all is well and good except that the theory behind the standard model with like all the mediator particles and all the matter particles to be massless; however, we all know they are not massless.
«Quarks» may be source of quasars» energy — The mysterious nuclear particles called «quarks,» which have not yet been detected but might nevertheless be basic building blocks of the atom's core, could be the source of the tremendous energy generated by the puzzling star - like objects known as quasars....
So, basically what they do is they put small particles of quasicrystal — you know, like putting fruits in Jell - O and the Jell - O is a softer form of steel and quasicrystals are like the fruit (laughter) in the Jell - O — and that makes really resilient steel; very strong, sort of, resilient, so it can, you know, take pressure without breaking and all that sort of thing.
Whenever electrically charged particles go faster through an insulating material (like water) than the speed of light would allow, they disrupt nearby electrons, causing a flash of light (known as Cherenkov radiation).
We should like to know the laws of motion of the particles; to predict, among other things, how they will interact when they collide and how these interactions will deflect one particle when it collides with another.
Though the viruses under study are too dangerous to manipulate in the Penn Vet lab, Harty's team was nonetheless able to examine the interactions between host and viral proteins by looking at what are known as virus - like particles, or VLPs, produced using the virus» matrix protein, of which PTAP is a part.
Imagine the most extreme example, a human being who does not possess the power to forget, who is damned to see becoming everywhere; such a human being would no longer believe in his own being, would no longer believe in himself, would see everything flow apart in turbulent particles, and would lose himself in this stream of becoming; like the true student of Heraclitus, in the end he would hardly even dare to lift a finger.
What about supersymmetric particles — hypothetical particles that are like weird twins of the known ones?
So just one new kind of particle; but the other ideas of that unification that I mentioned in supersymmetry suggest that it is more complicated; that there at least are several different kinds of particles involved, you know, like hydrogen and oxygen in water where water also has impurities; though we are going to find out anyway what this medium is made out of.
But in February, scientists discovered that stellar explosions known as supernovae act like particle accelerators, boosting protons» speeds enough to turn them into cosmic rays.
Georgi suggested that a property known as scale invariance — seen in fractal - like patterns that remain unchanged even when you zoom in and out to different scales, like the branching of redwood trees and the jagged edges of coastlines — could apply to individual particles too.
Liquid - like materials with particles in, known as dense suspensions, are found in the food industry (for example molten chocolate) and clay deposits on the bottom of oceans or rivers.
Because the Ebola virus - like particles used for screening different drugs in this study were not fully infectious, Level 4 was not required.The viral mini-genome generated modifies the Ebola virus to produce virus - like particles that are no longer harmful to humans.
All the same, said William Lanouette, science policy journalist and former senior analyst at the U.S Government Accountability Office (GAO), the increasing size and complexity of machines like particle accelerators and spacecraft require intense management and funding and their price increases the competition for them among scientists, no matter who pays for them.
For the past few decades, researchers have essentially known what nuclei are like, and the GANIL team certainly wasn't looking to upset the status quo by finding particles that couldn't exist.
Antimatter is rare in the known universe, flitting briefly in and out of existence in cosmic rays, solar flares and particle accelerators like CERN's Large Hadron Collider, for example.
But in some cases, droplet - like particles of uncrystallized material known as amorphous calcium carbonate, or ACC, formed first and then transformed into either aragonite or vaterite.
Researchers don't yet know if the particles would affect weather (like rainfall) or how living things grow.
If diatomaceous earth gets in your eyes, it can cause irreparable damage (because the particles are so small that they cut into the jelly - like substance of your eyes and can't be rinsed away), just so you know.
This condition is known as argyria, a harmless and extremely rare condition that only results from a massive and long - term internal use of silver compounds in which the particle size is too great, or uses silver salts as a base (like the royals did, without access to e.g. high - quality colloidal silver)-- but by itself is non-toxic.
So we know that after the particle accelerator was set off, the Earth in The Cloverfield Paradox started to be attacked by at least one monster much like the first movie.
(Or, you know, throw your hands in the air and keep each account as an undifferentiated copy of the whole, like a perfect atom because you're not going to mess around with the subatomic physics nonsense that this involves: particle accelerators are for nerds and supervillains).
Kotaku say's that battlefield 3 is beautiful and stunning and near close to the pc demo's EA keeps showing However IGN says that the game is in the pre alpha build and Is missing many things like destruction particle effects and more Kotaku says its all there Personally I think DICE should show of more console footage than Pc footage, that way we know what the game looks like and don't have to trust the descriptions of people we do nt know
His sculptures — geometric wall objects, façade - like reliefs, objects and sculptures created from abstract stereometric bodies which take the form of cubes, angles, columns, pedestals, podiums, movable walls and shelving — are made of cheap no - frills materials such as particle board, cardboard, linen, molton, Styrofoam, synthetic resin, emulsion paint, fluorescent tubes and other everyday building materials.
, you are lying on the floor of your place looking up, a small draft runs through the room, between the door and the window, and all things seem perfectly still, wind only disturbs concrete in imperceptible ways, or it may take millions of years to be noticed and, as the air runs through the space, all your plants move and all is animated and all is alive somehow, and here are the thoughts of all men in all ages and lands, they are not original with me, and that wind upon your plants is the common air that bathes the globe, and we have no ambitions of universalism, and I'm glad we don't, but the particles of air bring traces of pollen and are charged with electricity, desert sand, maybe sea water, and these particles were somewhere else before they were dragged here, and their route will not end by the door of this house, and if we tell each other stories, one can imagine that they might have been bathed by this same air, regrouped and recombined, recharged as a vehicle for sound, swirling as it moves, bringing the sound of a drum, like that Kabuki story where a fox recognizes the voice of its parents as a girl plays a drum made out of their skin, or any other event, and yet I always felt your work never tells stories, I tend to think that narrative implies a past tense, even if that past was just five seconds ago, one second ago was already the past, and human memory is irrelevant in geological time, plants and fish know not what tomorrow will bring, neither rocks nor metal do, but we all live here now, and we all need visions and we all need dreams, and as long as your metal sculptures vibrate they are always in the Present, and their past is a material truth alien to narrative, but well, maybe narrative does not imply a past tense at all and they are writing their own story while they gently move and breathe, and maybe nothing was really still before the wind came in, passing through the window as if through an irrational portal to make those plants dance, but everything was already moving and breathing in near complete silence, and if you're focused enough you can feel the pulse of a concrete wall and you can feel the tectonic movements of the earth, and you can hear the magma flowing under our feet and our bones crackling like a wild fire, and you can see the light of fireflies reflected in polished metal, and there is nothing magical about that, it is just the way things are, and sometimes we have to raise our voice because the music is too loud and let your clothes move to a powerful bass, sound waves and bright lights, powerful like the sun, blinding us if we stare for too long, but isn't it the biggest sign of love, like singing to a corn field, and all acts of kindness that are not pitiful nor utilitarian, that are truly horizontal as everything around us is impregnated with the deadliest violence, vertical and systemic, poisonous, and sometimes you just want to feel the sun burning your skin and look for life in all things declared dead, a kind of vitality that operates like corrosion, strong as the wind near the sea, transforming all things,
«Climate models consider anthropogenic forcings like greenhouse gases and tiny atmospheric particles known as aerosols, but they can not study a specific climate event like the current hiatus,» said Yu Kosaka, co-author of the Nature paper.
You are wilfully taking the extreme and irrelevant sub-thermodynamic case of a minuscule total number of isolated particles — in which regime the macroscopic temperature is increasingly ill - defined and no longer simply proportional to the kinetic energy per particle — and torturing it to produce something that looks a bit like a macroscopic lapse rate, but is really nothing more than a mathematical artefact of absolutely no significance.
Greenhouse gases — like carbon dioxide — trap heat and warm the planet, while fine particles suspended in droplets, known collectively as aerosols, usually cool the planet by reflecting the sun's energy away.
And it's filled with tiny particles known as PM2.5, which can lodge inside lungs, trigger coughing, worsen diseases like asthma, and lead to long - term damage including cancer.
Much like Laplace's viewpoint in the Essay where a demon knowing the positions and velocities of all particles can perfectly predict the future and reconstruct the past, while to the imperfect human mind not all information can be available in a snapshot and so it is reduced to ignorance or at best probabilistic reasoning.
And now, smashing into Blawg Review like a nuclear blast or a particle beam death ray, comes Blawg Review # 166, detonated by an anonymous English barrister known only as GeekLawyer.
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