Sentences with phrase «microseconds of»

The mechanism as I have been taught (painfully) in the site, is because the addition of GHG absorbtion causes the energy to stay in the GHG for a few extra microseconds of residence time before the energy is (mostly) returned to the air by molecular collisions, as the energy is transported from ground to space an a series of millions -LRB-?)
Biological processes on the other hand need microseconds of simulation time.
Sure enough, their scintillation detector started scintillating about twice as fast within a few microseconds of the strongest sonoluminescent flashes.
Over the course of a year, the team amassed 1.3 microseconds of simulation time, a significant length of time in the world of computational biophysics.
Videos showed the legs moved within 30 microseconds of each other during a jump.
A slightly different sequence of events in the first microseconds of the «Big Bang» would have resulted in a universe of all helium and no hydrogen.
Universal King - because from His «Fiat» the universe itself was spawned in the first microseconds of the explosive energies with which the creation itself began.
As I understand it, Alan Guth's work, and that of others exploring the first microseconds of what people of biblical faith know as Creation, builds on Lemaître's insights.
The best current astrophysics understanding of the first microseconds of the big bang event agree completely with the Genesis account.
To sum up in lay terminology, after the first microseconds of the big bang, there was an amorphous energy field.
As the universe expands, the average density of matter decreases; therefore, the density was much higher in the past, in particular exceeding nuclear levels within the first microsecond of the big bang.
When that first microsecond of eternity ended, the remainder of cosmic history unfolded with stolid inevitability.
Michael Shannon astutely judges every microsecond of menace as the heavy, adding trace elements of twisted levity, some scripted, some not.

Not exact matches

The other ironic part is that the complaint over the speed bump, the 350 microseconds, acts as if the market is devoid of latency already.
On a traditional exchange, we're measuring things in microseconds and a handful of milliseconds of latency on a matching engine is viewed as really unacceptable.
Now, Michael Lewis describes how fast data feeds and special exchange order types have enabled HFT computers to execute trades in microseconds and get ahead of other market participants.
I do not refer to myself as a section of a person now, and another and different section at each successing microsecond.
Chad» In the end the distinction between God creating deer in a microseconds, or creating deer over the course of millions of years is fairly irrelevant.
In the end the distinction between God creating deer in a microseconds, or creating deer over the course of millions of years is fairly irrelevant.
Somehow he leaps, corrals the ball, and gets two feet down despite having microseconds to consider how he'll do all of those things, and despite having a defender just inches away from him.
Why not hours, or multiples of Pi microseconds?
«Making sense of sound is one of the most computationally complex tasks we ask our brains to do, because we process information in microseconds,» said Kraus, the Hugh Knowles Professor of Communication Sciences.
This allowed them to obtain a measure of the velocity every 5 microseconds and demonstrate that the equipartition theorem holds (Science, DOI: 10.1126 / science.1189403).
Their results showed that a typical raindrop — roughly 2 millimetres wide and travelling at a few metres per second — compresses air in front of it a few microseconds before hitting a solid surface.
Grzywacz and the ORNL team developed a data acquisition technology that uses a new type of digital signal processing to measure very fast nuclear decays down to a microsecond — one millionth of a second.
The new method offers a variety of advantages: for example, the gate operations take place within microseconds which is an asset for quantum information processing.
A team of researchers at Columbia Engineering has used miniaturized electronics to measure the activity of individual ion - channel proteins with temporal resolution as fine as one microsecond, producing the fastest recordings of single ion channels ever performed.
She plugged in new x-ray snapshots of p53 fragments and beefed up her program to make a movie of the quivering activity of each of the protein's 1.6 million atoms over a full microsecond, an eternity on the atomic scale that required about a month of supercomputer time.
Spend 40 years by the shores of the Dead Sea, at the lowest elevations on the Earth's surface, and you'll age 48 microseconds less than someone living at sea level, and 750 microseconds less than the residents of La Rinconada in Peru, at an altitude of 5100 metres
RHIC was initially the only machine in the world capable of re-creating the environmental conditions and temperature adjustments in which matter can rapidly change forms, just like in the microseconds following the Big Bang.
Scientists believe it orchestrates the rehearsal of focused activity, in the microseconds before you decide to squeeze a dynamometer, say.
These simulations of the structures and the physical properties of their materials were extraordinarily complex, with the aircraft impact analysis requiring computations «that were accurate over microseconds,» Sunder recalls.
The atoms are unstable and their two constituent particles disappear in a puff of gamma rays within a microsecond.
Equipped with GPS, this technology gives you microsecond accuracy of time across the whole power system.
A long time means that — for modern electronics, it's a long time — it takes half a millisecond for the photon to go from A to B, so if you decide something like a few tenths of a microsecond before, then that's a long time.
(A millisecond is one thousandth of a second) The length of a day, which is measured by the time it takes Earth to rotate once on its axis, can be measured to an accuracy of about 10 microseconds, or 10 millionths of a second.
Ps lives less than a microsecond after it is formed, but that is a long enough for it to demonstrate the distinctive properties of an atom.
In one study published in Geophysical Research Letters in 2007, scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology in Hamburg, Germany, estimated the mass redistribution resulting from ocean warming would shorten the day by 120 microseconds, or nearly one tenth of a millisecond, over the next two centuries.
The idea behind ALICE is to recreate the exotic, primordial «soup of particles» known as quark - gluon plasma that appeared microseconds after the universe's birth.
The spin - 1 states, on the other hand, last for about 0.1 microsecond, and only decay by emission of three gamma rays (for reasons of symmetry).
In fact, the Indonesian Sumatra earthquake in December 2004 that spawned a deadly tsunami moved so much water that it slightly changed our planet's shape and sped its rotation by 2.68 microseconds, or nearly three millionths of a second.
And scientists — exasperated by the blank stares that usually greet their enthusiastic statements, such as «Doesn't it just blow your mind how polypeptides fold their way through zillions of possible permutations in microseconds
Whereas humans make that calculation in about 10 microseconds, the fly, with its tiny head, does the math in almost a thousandth of that time ¿ 50 nanoseconds.
When plucked, the string vibrates for minutes with a period of a microsecond (equivalent to a standard guitar note playing for a month).
Subtracting known influences and comparing their results with satellite records of Earth's day length, they found that elevated temperatures in the pool during El Niño years correlated with days that were a few microseconds longer than in other years.
Using a high - speed actuator as the driving source of pump, they succeeded in producing a flow with 16 microseconds for cell sorting.
«In this way, modern supercomputers allow millions of small timesteps of atomic motions to be simulated, getting us to examine the protein but also cellular membrane behavior on the microsecond timescale.»
Raymond Simmonds of the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder, Colo., who led one of the teams, got a seven - millimeter - long wire to store a photon for more than one microsecond.
The findings reveal new aspects of the ultra-hot, «perfect fluid» that give clues to the state of the young universe just microseconds after the big bang.
That's much longer than standard lightning strikes, which last tens of microseconds, and researchers are still struggling to explain how the fireballs persist.
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