Sentences with phrase «luminosity led»

Not exact matches

«So far we have doubled the peak and average «luminosity» - measures that are directly related to the collision rates,» said Wolfram Fischer, Associate Chair for Accelerators of Brookhaven's Collider - Accelerator Department and lead author on a paper describing the success just published in Physical Review Letters.
«For about three minutes after the BAT trigger, the superflare's X-ray brightness was greater than the combined luminosity of both stars at all wavelengths under normal conditions,» noted Goddard's Adam Kowalski, who is leading a detailed study on the event.
The incredible luminosity of a black - hole system known as ULX - 1 may force a rethink of the leading theories that explain how some black holes radiate energy, researchers said.
Because this leads to an unresolvable overlap between spectral types» effective temperature and luminosity for some masses and ages of different L - T - Y types, no distinct temperature or luminosity values can be given.
This will help keep breakouts at bay and boost dead skin cell turnover, leading to more luminosity.
It continues with works from the world's leading innovators in the arts, as they break through thresholds of space, memory, sound, and genre — from Philippe Parreno who, in his largest exhibition in the U.S. to date, transforms the presentation of visual art into an evolving sensory journey; to Wayne McGregor, Olafur Eliasson, and Jamie xx as they create a new contemporary ballet; to avant - garde performance artist Laurie Anderson who, through a site - specific installation in the Armory's drill hall, will expand upon her work with storytelling and technology to create a site - specific environment that serves as a meditation on time, identity, surveillance and freedom; and finally to Igor Levit and Marina Abramović as they interpret Bach's renowned Goldberg Variations, to create a concentrated durational performance that reflects upon music, time, space, emptiness, and luminosity.
From the 1960s are Charles Green Shaw's Black on White against Yellow (1968), in which Shaw revived the polygon from his art of the 1930s to create a new minimalist statement, Leon Berkowitz's Cathedral, No. 11 (1968), a work by the Washington Color School artist in which imperceptible shifts of color and an emanating luminosity produce a meditational quality, and Betty Parsons's Miami (1966), which evokes the artist's enthusiasm for Native American art, while demonstrating the influences on her work of the leading abstract painters of the era, whose art she championed at her gallery on 57 th Street.
Her experiments in stretching the creative boundaries of watercolor led her to make her own paints for greater depth of color and luminosity.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z