Sentences with phrase «nuclear physicists call»

Nuclear physicists call this the strong force.
The numbers 20 and 28 are what nuclear physicists call «magic numbers,» and nuclei with this many protons or neutrons get an extra measure of stability.

Not exact matches

Anti-falling physicists have been theorizing for decades about the «electromagnetic force,» the «weak nuclear force,» the «strong nuclear force,» and so - called «force of gravity and they tilt their findings toward trying to unite them into one force.
Its recommendations include «mount [ing] a massive experiment to search for a hypothesized type of nuclear decay that is possible only if an elusive, nearly massless particle called the neutrino is — weirdly — its own antiparticle,» «building a new collider,» and «fully exploit [ing] the three major facilities U.S. nuclear physicists already have.»
Sigurd Hofmann, a nuclear physicist at the GSI research center in Darmstadt, Germany, calls the new work on element 117 «convincing.»
The skyrmions, as these tiny whirls are called after the British nuclear physicist Tony Skyrme, follow a complex trajectory and even continue to move after the external excitation is switched off.
For example, in Diabe, in the South China Sea — in China, and also in France in a village called Shoe in France where there's a nuclear power plant, neutrino physicists have set up their detector.
Nuclear physicists create the fireballs by colliding ordinary nuclei — made of protons and neutrons — in an «atom smasher» called the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility at Brookhaven National Laboratory.
First, a number of sensational discoveries were made by two English groups; the identification of the pion (by Powell) and the so - called V particles or kaons (by Rochester and Butler) led many nuclear physicists to turn to the study of cosmic rays.
Designed and developed by a team of nuclear physicists led by senior scientist Howard Wieman at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, now retired, the HFT is the first silicon detector at a collider that uses a technology found in digital cameras called monolithic active pixel sensor technology.
Results from a new study involving Berkeley Lab scientists could explain a mismatch between predictions and recent measurements of ghostly particles streaming from nuclear reactors — the so - called «reactor antineutrino anomaly» that has puzzled physicists since 2011.
The narrators are a member of a doomsday cult who releases poison gas in a subway in Tokyo, and details his retreat to Okinawa and a small nearby island, Kume - jima; a jazz aficionado who works as a sales clerk in a Tokyo music store; a lawyer in a financial institution in Hong Kong who has been moving large sums of money from a certain account; a woman who owns a Tea Shack on China's Holy Mountain and speaks to a tree; a non-corporeal sentient entity which is searching for who or what it is; a gallery attendant in Petersburg who is involved in an art theft scam; a ghostwriter / drummer living in London who saves a woman from being run over by a taxi; an Irish nuclear physicist who quits her job when she finds her research is being used for military purposes; and a late night radio talkback DJ who finds himself fielding calls from an intriguing caller referring to himself as the zookeeper.
Dr. Antonino Zichichi — one of the world's foremost physicists, former president of the European Physical Society, who discovered nuclear antimatter — calls global warming models «incoherent and invalid.»
Call in a nuclear physicist that has won the Nobell Piece Prize?
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