Sentences with phrase «pulled by another magnet»

He also painted more than Lancashire — from Piccadilly Circus to the Lake District, he found similar crowds of people with the same dogged gait, walking determinedly into the wind, as if pulled by a magnet attracted to their caps.
The trick is to get the iron to chemically bond to the soap — or as chemists like to say, the «surfactant» — and in sufficient quantity to enable the ironic solution to be pulled by a magnet.
Much like a magnet being pulled by another magnet, these newly charged molecules become attracted to the positive and negative charges in water.

Not exact matches

Like a bipolar magnet, the Christian author today feels the pull of both forces: a fervent desire to communicate what gives life meaning counteracted by an artistic inclination toward self - expression, form and structure that any «message» might interrupt.
In the past, researchers studied specific cells by isolating them, injecting them with ferrous iron and literally pulling cells away from each other with a magnet.
He further explains that most previous work primarily used tiny magnets to open ion channels by pushing or pulling them in the right manner.
But that first year white parents responded to bussing by pulling their children from public schools en masse, prompting the district to create special magnet programs to entice them back.
There are a wide variety of power - ups to be unlocked, including one that turns the character invisible and another than works like a magnet, pulling coins toward the character as he runs by them.
The painting makes you feel as if you were one of those particles in the painting, pulled in by an invisible magnet to the nucleus of the canvas.Up close you are able to see residues of color that have been over powered by the monochromatic duo of black and white impasto technique (almost un-noticeable from afar).
Meteorologist and climate researcher David Dilley of Global Weather Oscillations http://www.globalweathercycles.com, says the gravitational cycles act like a magnet by pulling the atmosphere's high pressure systems northward or southward by as much as 3 or 4 degrees of latitude from their normal seasonal positions.
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