Sentences with phrase «through tiny light»

Scientist starts off running through tiny light beams to avoid death, but he soon learns crates are his best friend.

Not exact matches

The tiny sensors, which consist of infrared light - emitting diodes (LEDs) coupled with a sensitive light detector, measure infinitesimal gradations in light in human tissue, due to changing blood volume in the microvasculature as blood circulates through the body — a process that follows in rhythm with the beating of the heart.
Each subpixel uses a combination of liquid crystals and polarising filters that act like tiny shutters, either letting light through or blocking it.
But the music starts and I'm weeping through the songs about the wonderful cross while two tinies colour pictures at my feet on the gym floor and I sway with the newborn in one arm, the other raised to the gym lights.
Light can only ever seep through the tiniest of gaps in a world of darkness.
Even the teeny - tiniest amount of light creeping around through the window can signal to your child's brain that it's morning and sleep time is over.
Tiny, mirrorlike structures known as distributed Bragg reflectors reflect this fluorescent light as well as all the other light the photonic crystal allows to pass through.
A team led by atomic physicist Lene Vestergaard Hau of the Rowland Institute for Science and Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, found that light moved 20 million times more sluggishly through the tiny condensate than it does through a vacuum.
Tiny differences in the wavelengths of the light that passes through these heavy metals, compared to experiments here on Earth, gives us clues about potential differences in the fundamental laws of physics under extreme gravity compared to here on Earth.
Tiny cages with nanowire bars could block light from entering or exiting, but allow other materials through — which might be useful for biomedicine
As polarized light bounces off of these crystals, they appear as tiny bright dots when observed through the phone's camera lens — enabling an instant, accurate diagnosis.
It uses an ultrathin array of tiny waveguides, known as a metasurface, which bends light as it passes through, similar to a curved lens.
They pass muon antineutrinos through the oil and look to see whether tiny flashes of light and gamma radiation are produced when electron antineutrinos interact with protons.
In a recent example, outlined in Nature last year by a team from Yale University and the University of Washington in Seattle, laser light routed through a tiny bridge - shaped resonator induced the bridge to vibrate up and down within a range of a few nanometers.
MCD is diagnosed based on the characteristic podocyte, elongations of the cell normally too tiny to be seen through a light microscope.
A TINY hole at the end of an optical fibre lets more light through when it is covered.
In the team's experimental setup, electricity was supplied to a tiny piece of tungsten selenide (small rectangle at center) through two gold wires (from top left and right), causing it to emit light (bright area at center), demonstrating its potential as an LED material.
The technology is so sensitive that it can detect the tiny traces of light that pass through the body's tissue from the light of the endoscope.
The amplifier translates electrical impulses of the brain into flashes of light that shine through the scalp, where they are picked up by a tiny magnetically attached receiver.
It uses an ultrathin array of tiny waveguides, known as a metasurface, which bends light as it passes through.
If there are any alien civilizations out there, they would only know about us if their planet is within that 200 - light - year bubble, or if they happened to be passing through our tiny portion of the Milky Way on a transgalactic journey.
For the visitors, seeing a tiny embryo down a microscope was certainly interesting, but when the fluorescent light was turned on, revealing such things as red - labelled blood flowing through glowing green vessels, the exclamation heard was usually «wow»!
Or it wouldn't be possible to get light through such tiny holes.
The weather was crisp and the rain held off as we took the big guns out on GingerMan's fine road course, and the precipitation then confined itself to a light mist for our day of driving on the tiny two - lanes that twist through Michigan's remote blueberry country.
The light is created through the conversion of the beams emitted by tiny laser diodes by means of a fluorescent phosphor material inside the headlight.
It always shines a tiny point of light through at higher settings.
This has to be considered in light of the fact that average performance can generally be obtained through passive investing, with tiny fees and almost no risk of falling short.
Entering the gallery requires an appointment, but the lights are on and the gate is up from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. every single day, and the room is so tiny that you can get a reasonably good sense of the show through the floor - to - ceiling glass windows.
The smaller of these two, an untitled mechanized light piece made by Burge and the Philadelphia - based artist Scott Kip is set into a temporary wall and looks like a view of a night sky through a tiny window.
The holes that let light come through look like tiny stars.
Ms. Bove's arrangement of 60's paperbacks and photos on shelves is a conceptual twist on still life, and her curtain of tiny beads is both laborious and delicate, shifting with the light through a nearby window and flirting with your inattention.
Not being absorbed by real world water, visible is not only not capable because of its tiny scale of moving the whole molecule of water into vibration which is what it takes to heat water, but it isn't even able to be absorbed by the electrons of the water molecules as the electrons of the molecules of air absorb it, so water doesn't reflect / scatter visible light on the electrons of molecule level as does air, but gives up and passes it along, and so, visible is transmitted through, also, unchanged, but much delayed.
So now we have a whole generation, because it was deliberately introduced into the education system, who believe the idiotic fisics «that visible light is capable of heating the water in the oceans», when in the real world and real world physics, a) water is a transparent medium for visible light, it doesn't absorb visible light at all but transmits it through unchanged, and b) visible light in the real world works on the electronic transition level on meeting matter, this level is tiny, it isn't capable of moving whole molecules of matter into vibration which is what it takes to heat water.
A few mm of window glass is quite transparent, with the impurities only absorbing a very tiny fraction of the radiation, but a window 100 metres thick would not pass any light at all, there's no where for the radiation to «slither through».
But if you have a hollow sphere with just a tiny entrance hole, then any light (or infrared) that enters through the hole will bounce around many, many times before managing to find its way back out of that tiny hole.
... More Growing up, I lived for a time in the Philippines, where I knew people who lit their tiny homes with single lantern batteries or struggled to breathe through the dense diesel fumes of Manila, so I have a feel for the pressing need around the world for both cheap energy and clean energy.
The perforated metal screen inside the glass of your microwave oven door is specially designed so that light (which has a short wavelength) can pass through the tiny holes but microwave radiation (which has a longer wavelength) can not.
It is a tiny sky light that connects through a long aluminum tube to the roof.
We are currently drywalling our basement and we do not have gorgeous light streaming through our teeny tiny windows.
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