Not exact matches
Try placing a ringing
tuning fork atop your head, and your inner ear will pick up the sound, says Elizabeth Olson, an expert on hearing
at Columbia University.
Wald compares its soils to a
tuning fork, which moves
at just the right speed to create a tone.
The experimental physicist used an aluminum bar like a
tuning fork and then waited for it to move, staring
at the noise for much of a decade.
Like a musical
tuning fork, the resonant bar and the resonant cone needed to vibrate
at certain frequencies to apply the right amount of energy to the test object, Barnes said.
«Most people still consider their hormones as a private, innate part of their bodies,» Sandra Steingraber, a biologist
at Ithaca College, said
at the conference, «not as a
tuning fork that responds to messages streaming in from the environment.
They are placed
at the point in the
tuning fork diagram where it brances off to the regular spiral or barred spiral pattern prong.
This
tuning fork is the ranged alternative to your starting scythe, and can be used to smash crystals and glass
at range
At the centre is the marvel that is Daniel Day - Lewis, whose performance is like a conductor's baton to all the other actors; David Strathairn has said the cast used Lewis's Lincoln as its collective emotional
tuning fork.
by Walter Chaw Philosopher - scientist Nikola Tesla (of coil fame) once suggested that the universe winding down vibrated to a sympathetic rhythm; art,
at its best, puts a
tuning fork to it.
The use of
tuning forks in the perfect 5th interval, one
at each ear, produces an organized wave of expansion and contraction throughout the body.
Because this frequency is below human hearing, the first
tuning fork is set
at the first octave above the Schumann Resonance that can be heard.
The creators of INNER SOUND, Arden and Jack Wilken, have developed a special series of
tuning forks spaced in perfect 5th intervals for use
at both ears.
The
tuning forks vibrate
at frequencies for 55 miles per hour and 35 miles per hour.