Sentences with phrase «more fundamental observation»

Not exact matches

«When more - powerful detectors provide us with more observations,» Mészáros said, «we also will be able to use Fast Radio Bursts as a probe of their host galaxies, of the space between galaxies, of the cosmic - web structure of the universe, and as a test of fundamental physics.»
The spectroscopic, imaging and polarimetric observations that SPICA will b... ▽ More The SPICA mid and far - infrared telescope will address fundamental issues in our understanding of star formation and ISM physics in galaxies.
You're also right in your fundamental observation that this shifts more of the process onto the fans, for better — they will have a chance to collaborate on the production earlier and enjoy extras that would be impossible with a regular release — and for worse — they are paying for the product earlier than ever before.
Even then, it is difficult to reconcile what one sees with what one knows, and this is a fundamental element of Staniak's practice, one that encourages careful and thoughtful observation while suggesting that there is a lot more to his work than meets the eye.
Apart from the fundamental scientific advances of the breakthrough papers, there is an hierarchy of classes of lesser papers, along the lines of those which — • Confirm or deny the main thrust of a breakthrough paper by arriving from other angles • Provide an alternative or improvement to the main findings of breakthrough papers • Contribute more observation to the breakthrough paper and discuss its relevance • Seek to set a complementary base for a breakthrough in a related aspect of science • Report the views of a clutch of authors about a topic they deem to have political importance • Ditto for educational importance • Write papers that are knowingly lacking good science to place authors in one camp or another • Lambast an author or authors for being on the «wrong» side of a polarised topic • Perform meta analysis Etc..
The more fundamental a physical Law is, the less we are able to prove it, the more the law relies on consistent observation instead of deduction or derivation.
Justice Perell's observation, that «it is cynical to assume that with many years of future employment both possible and needed, that he will sit on his hands and wait out the reasonable notice period rather than getting on with his career» is no more than a reiteration of the BC Court of Appeal's articulation of this fundamental principle underlying the duty to mitigate.
In my observation, the legal profession has made such slow progress on diversity because we tend to view this topic as something separate and apart from something much more fundamental — lawyer development.
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