Sentences with phrase «of tiny waves»

Co-Founder and Dad of Tiny Waves.
The beach is picturesque, and the rolling sets of tiny waves will offer you a respite from the Caribbean sun.
Rail: One of the wonderful things I felt immediately about the Wave Cathedral was first the sensation of being swallowed by the water, but then I was confronted with what Leibniz observed: when you hear the roaring sound of the ocean, the big sound is made up of an endless number of tiny sounds of each tiny wave.

Not exact matches

In a staged simulation called Quantum Dawn 2, bank executives in charge of operations, technology and crisis planning were tasked with detecting how a massive cyber attack was unfolding in the markets - but each one only got to see a tiny red flag waving in a sea of information.
The latest wave of exit polls show New Democracy expanding its tiny lead of the left - wing SYRIZA coalition.
If black hole after all the scenario of quantum mechanical process have completed their interactions behave accordingly to Relativity equation to became eventually a tiny speck in space of high intensity mass with very strong gravitation wave could the telescope have picked up such polarization of light from some gravitated wave of dying star or black hole.
Blame it on the wave of adorable tiny humans clogging my Instagram feed.
Trying to fit what felt like a tidal wave of calling into that tiny box of limitations brought real confusion and pain, which not only affected my sense of calling, but also my whole sense of self and of God.
By the time the waves from the black - hole merger arrived, they had become tiny ripples, changing the length of the pipes by just 1 part in 1 billion trillion.
As numerous clinical studies confirm the gut benefits touted by brands, probiotics» popularity with consumers has rocketed and the inclusion of these tiny gut bugs in beverage has sent waves through the industry.
«What characterised the first wave of employees was what they had was a tiny team with smaller salaries but big titles,» Fetch chief executive Scott Lorson, who joined in 2009, told The Australian Financial Review.
Moms of color wave tiny American flags from row - homes while holding their kids.
She evoked that remembered world of pale salt grass and tiny bay waves with a freshness and immediacy that reminded readers of Virginia Woolf's early work.
The prevalence of the defensive shift is unmistakable, but what if the next wave is the Wee Willie Keeler - type player, tiny ninjas who can beat the shift with an artisanal flair?
Slope - shouldered Jack Ramsay, the St. Joseph's coach, who had spent most of the contest prayerfully on one knee, waved to the tiny Hawk rooting section as the game ended 96 to 86.
Since radio waves can't penetrate solid rock, the probe would vibrate, transmitting data in a series of tiny seismic waves.
To spot such tiny displacements, however, scientists must damp out vibrations such as the rumble of seismic waves, the thrum of traffic, and the crashing of waves on distant coastlines.
Easter Island is a tiny dot of land nearly lost among the waves in the Pacific Ocean.
BlackGEM is going to hunt down optical counterparts of sources of gravitational wavestiny ripples in spacetime generated by colliding black holes and neutron stars and detected for the first time in 2015 by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational - Wave Observatory (LIGO).
If you provide energy in the form of radio waves, these tiny magnets can switch orientation and give off a resonance frequency that changes predictably based on the strength of the magnetic field.
Covering the cavity holding their gills may help a stock - still cuttlefish in another way too, the researchers suggest: It may stifle water flow in and out of that recess, thereby reducing the size of tiny pressure waves that could alert predators to the creature's presence.
Gravitational ripples are tiny: LIGO is tuned to detect waves that stretch and squeeze the arms by a thousandth of the diameter of a proton.
At both observatories, extremely sensitive laser measurements inside miles - long tunnels caught the waves» tiny stretches and squeezes of space - time.
These ripples were thought to be caused by gravitational waves, ripples in the very fabric of space - time, created a tiny fraction of a second after the big bang.
In 2007, NANOGrav began observing a set of the fastest - rotating pulsars to try to detect tiny shifts caused by gravitational waves.
Sonoluminescence, the puzzling glow emitted by a bubble in a field of high - pitched sound waves, may be caused by a tiny jet of liquid that shoots across the interior of the bubble at supersonic speed and slams into the opposite side, a Johns Hopkins researcher has proposed.
When one of eardrums vibrates from a sound wave it pushes the other, and the tiny time difference it takes to activate one ear drum allows the fly to figure out which direction the sound is coming from.
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS — Physicists and engineers have greatly extended the distance that tiny, fleeting waves of electrons can travel on the surface of a metal.
Some researchers hope to get around such problems by exploiting tiny waves of electrons that exist on the boundary between a metal and an electrical insulator such as glass or silicon.
The keystone of Einstein's general theory of relativity, gravitational waves are tiny ripples in the fabric of space - time.
But the layered structure of his half - cylinder - shaped hyperlens preserves these evanescent waves, allowing incredibly tiny objects to be resolved.
These tiny organisms wave their tentacles in the currents to snatch tidbits of food, all the while secreting shells to anchor their trunks.
What It's Made of: A rigid synthetic polymer composed of tiny rods spaced about 350 nanometers (billionths of a meter) apart, a gap small enough to manipulate waves of visible light.
Einstein@Home will search for a specific pattern of periodic gravitational waves produced by tiny spinning objects called neutron stars, some of which turn into pulsars that emit rapid blips of radiation.
These waves are direct evidence that the currently observable universe expanded rapidly from a subatomic volume in the first tiny fraction of a second after the Big Bang.
A tiny camera in a pair of glasses will send the image via radio waves into the mouth.
Imagine an electromagnetic wave moving through a flat surface made of thousands of tiny electrical cells.
Andrew Gray at the University of Manchester, UK, says captive breeding is critical for preventing vulnerable amphibians being wiped out by the next wave of disease or the tiniest change in their natural environment.
The ability to accurately measure tiny displacements of microscopic bodies has applications in sensing trace amounts of hazardous biological or chemical agents, perfecting the movement of miniature robots, accurately deploying airbags and detecting extremely weak sound waves traveling through thin films.
I built a work that exploits the phenomenon of sonoluminescence, in which extremely high pressure sound waves in liquids create tiny sources of electromagnetic energy.
Called gravitational waves, these undulations are so tiny that one passing through Earth would jostle us by far less than the diameter of a proton.
The 180 - mile - wide Encke gap results from the tiny moon Pan ploughing a path through the rings, leaving behind scalloped edges and spiral patterns of density waves.
Kim's group met this goal by making a control algorithm that enables the tiny robots to effectively use the shape of the electric field they're riding as a way to detect and avoid obstacles — like a surfer reading the waves» break to steer clear of submerged hazards.
Buried deep in the jumble of jagged peaks are two tiny signals: one wave rising and falling 12 times per second and another rising and falling 15 times per second.
Plasmons are waves of electrons that slosh like a fluid across the surface of tiny metallic nanoparticles.
Last year, Albert Polman at the FOM Institute for Atomic and Molecular Physics in Amsterdam and Nader Engheta, an electrical engineer at the University of Pennsylvania, developed a tiny waveguide device in which light waves of a single wavelength also achieved epsilon - near - zero.
Konrad Wiese, a zoologist at the University of Hamburg, thinks he's figured out how krill keep in touch: their tiny antennae pick up pressure waves from their neighbors.
Gravitational waves are tiny ripples in space and time itself, set off by cosmic cataclysms such as the merger of two neutrons stars or black holes.
Sound waves travel through the ear canal before reaching the eardrum and the tiny bones of the middle ear.
Not exactly a wave in the ordinary sense, the swerve was a deviation from straight line motion postulated by the Greek philosopher Epicurus around 300 B.C. Unlike Aristotle, Epicurus believed in atoms, and argued that reality was built entirely from the random collisions of an infinite number of those tiny particles.
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