In high school, I scrawled lyrics in my physics workbook, murmuring the lines. |
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Those equations and present particle physics say that matter and antimatter are equivalent. |
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The electromagnetic interaction is described by the theory of quantum electrodynamics, one of the most successful theories of physics. |
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Second, this shaky notion was based on a highly abstract and contentious branch of physics known as string theory. |
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There was only one talk about physics itself, a brief tutorial on quantum electrodynamics by Joe Polchinski. |
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Unfortunately, while we have good theories of atomic physics, we don't real have a good theory of quantum gravity. |
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The successful candidate should be able to demonstrate a solid background and interest in quantum physics and condensed matter theory. |
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One aspect of quantum physics is that the act of observing can change the thing being observed. |
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He offers an eminently readable account of parallel worlds and their various levels, and also runs through the history of quantum physics. |
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Success in this area of research requires a deeper understanding of quantum physics. |
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Hardly was this feeling firmly established when physics was turned on its head by the twin revolutions of quantum theory and relativity theory. |
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You'd think even a dyed-in-the-wool warmist would stop for a second and think about the physics involved. |
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The particle physics community began adapting existing high-energy accelerators to provide heavy-ion nuclear beams. |
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Very early in the study of high-energy physics the only source of high energy particles was in cosmic rays. |
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Advances in physics and engineering are making energy from renewable sources increasingly affordable. |
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May 4, 1998 after decades of theoretical physics, a 2 qubit quantum computer capable of loading data and reading out a result is announced. |
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Among the high achievers was Hannah, who made the grade in physics, biology, chemistry, maths and general studies. |
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He studied mathematical physics and acoustics producing a major study in 1862 which looked at musical theory and the perception of sound. |
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Kelly received a PhD in physics from Harvard University and is a fellow of the American Physical Society. |
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The final year physics undergraduates plan to study the crystallisation of protein solutions in weightless conditions. |
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Any secondary school physics text or pilot licence manual will tell you that aerofoils generate lift because of the Venturi effect. |
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When the officials weren't hindering them, the laws of physics appeared to defy the Italians. |
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The laws of physics aren't all that aerodynamicists deal with when they head to the wind tunnel. |
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So the group has devised several strategies to try to increase the number of students reading physics at universities. |
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He then entered the University of Cambridge to read general studies before taking up physics. |
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That means the status of strings in string theory in physics can become a philosophical topic by way of discussions of realism and nominalism. |
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The physics prize went to three Americans who've explained something of what goes on within the nucleus of atoms. |
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Hopper, who earned her doctorate in math and physics from Yale in 1934, was a rear admiral in the Navy and a computer pioneer. |
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Its best-known uses have been in physics and engineering, on such problems as how to aim bombs more accurately. |
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This reading is bolstered by Alexander's discussion of the reducibility of chemistry to physics, on which he is neutral. |
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The basic data of physics are largely knowable through experiments whose results are often explained mathematically. |
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When I was in high school, I gave a presentation on black holes, wormholes and time travel for my physics class. |
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She went to Paris in 1891 for further studies and obtained licentiateships in physics and mathematical sciences. |
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My A level physics practical exam featured an accident too, though far less exciting than this one. |
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Natalie has just completed nine GCSE exams and will take A levels in mathematics, physics, biology and PE at Millfield. |
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In this regard, I offer a few guesses about some general directions in which statistical physics may change. |
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We're using our big laser system to study the detailed atomic physics of xenon with other alkalis besides rubidium, such as cesium and potassium. |
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In 2002, Riccardo Giacconi was named co-recipient of the 2002 Nobel Prize in physics for his pioneering work in X-ray astronomy. |
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The prize is in honor of Bruno Rossi, an authority on cosmic-ray physics and a pioneer in the field of X-ray astronomy. |
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You need to allow for the physics of the way that metal moves and consider springback. |
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Britney Spears, the wholesome princess of pop, and queen of semiconductor physics is not the harmless little lamb we all took her for. |
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Mr Shaw is a first year graduate student in physics at the University of Southern California. |
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Once we had this physics lesson with a relief teacher because our normal teacher was off sick and Andy pretended to be deaf. |
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In some universities, physics departments have been broken up and amalgamated with other schools, such as engineering. |
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Who's to say I'm wrong if I don't find modern physics very satisfying and would prefer the spiritual beliefs of the Azande? |
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Mathematical physics is like music, which a young and zesty spirit can best seize and use, as did Mozart. |
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The barrier we are hitting is basically the barrier set by the laws of atomic physics. |
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I have to say I was somewhat interested in this film which, I was told, was an attempt to explain quantum physics in layman's terms. |
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Day 1 focuses on the contribution from scientists in physics, material science and life sciences. |
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He plays a college physics professor, whose rule-ridden rigidity keeps life at a distance. |
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Over 30 years ago undergraduate physics labs in Glasgow University were run on very similar lines to the Oxford system you describe. |
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He and his students worked both in labs and on the computer with various physics applets. |
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They may have translated the archaic terms into scientific-sounding language, but it's the same old vitalism, dressed up as quantum physics. |
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Previous winners constitute a roll-call of those who have shaped physics in the 20th century. |
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My colleagues' somewhat ropey grasp of physics resulted in a deluge of emails pointing out the error of our ways. |
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So in the physics department we have classes on the arrow of time, quantum mechanics for everyone. |
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In physics, a question which often bothers theoreticians is the origin of an arrow of time. |
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Attanasio mixes Arthurian lore with Norse gods, modern physics and sundry faerie creatures in this literary, passionate novel. |
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The under-representation of girls in physics post-16 is a serious issue for the UK and in particular for the STEM community. |
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Courses related to astrobiology are offered in the departments of geology, biology, physics, and electrical engineering. |
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So how did Davies become interested in physics and eventually astrobiology? |
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Analysis was driven by the requirements of mathematical physics and astronomy. |
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He held university chairs in astronomy, physics and mathematics as well as working as an architect. |
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Topics other than mathematics also interested him, especially physics and astronomy. |
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In addition to his mathematical work, Talbot also published on astronomy and physics. |
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He studied physics as his main subject but took mathematics, astronomy and chemistry as minor subjects. |
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In many instances, these three basic physical sciences even overlap, giving rise to joint disciplines such as astrophysics and chemical physics. |
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Cosmology and astrophysics are branches of physics in which one needs an unusual combination of breadth and depth to excel. |
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The picture suggests possible solutions to many outstanding questions in physics and astrophysics. |
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I predict that particle physics and its links with astrophysics and cosmology will continue to be exciting in the foreseeable future. |
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The world of atoms and photons does not follow the rules of classical physics. |
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These systems bridge the gap between atomic physics and plasma physics, and between plasma physics and condensed-matter physics. |
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In 1847 he turned to physics, accepting the chair of physics at Bonn working on magnetism, electronics and atomic physics. |
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He had no teaching obligations and undertook research in physical chemistry and atomic physics. |
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Trained in atomic physics, he has long dealt with precision measurements on the tiniest of scales. |
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With a Masters degree in atomic physics, Tsaneva knows what she's talking about. |
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However, this stronger claim is very well confirmed by experiments in atomic physics. |
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Current research in atomic physics focuses on describing the internal structure of atoms. |
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This does not mean, however, that chemistry, biochemistry or atomic physics are in some way giving us a false picture of reality. |
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This work led to important applications in relativity theory, and much of his work also found application in atomic physics. |
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Modern physics has ceased to be atomistic in the full sense that the Greek atomists intended. |
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The use of Mach number to characterize flight speed is rooted in the basic physics of fluid flow. |
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Soon his confidence in theoretical physics was such that by the second semester he was taking all of Sommerfeld's courses. |
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The discovery of magnetohydrodynamic waves was a major breakthrough in plasma physics and its applications to space physics and fusion research. |
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But it had arisen from an act of inspired tinkering with what was still, in many respects, classical physics. |
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The other physics teacher, Mr. Meyer, actually makes the class interesting. |
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Prior to joining Scripps, Smith graduated from Northern Arizona University with a bachelor's degree in physics and astronomy. |
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During a short tea break, Dyson had connected quantum physics with the Riemann hypothesis. |
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I studied computational physics at university rather than engineering or telecommunications. |
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Nanotechnology is an emerging engineering field that borrows from such areas as materials science, engineering, chemistry, biology and physics. |
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But understanding the science of complexity is a far more useful metaphor than the traditional appeal to Newtonian physics. |
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My first explanation is my theory for the sci-fi physics of the electromagnetic storm. |
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In particular, the k coloring problem can be mapped directly onto a model of a magnetic system in solid-state physics. |
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About 130 University students cheated on a physics term paper last year, despite the school's strict honor code. |
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By the mid-nineteenth century, advances in physics, chemistry, metallurgy, and ballistics were influencing the manufacture of weapons. |
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He then went on to write further texts on mathematical physics, completing one on elasticity. |
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He demonstrates the coherence and congruence of theism with the most recent advances in physics. |
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If breaking the laws of physics is necessary to get the plot of the movie to work, then okay. |
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However he was also very active in applications of mathematics to theoretical physics. |
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This gives us a toy model of a deterministic Democritean universe, in which kazillions of bits get flipped in sequence, governed by a fixed physics. |
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Since philosophy and physics intertwine at the far reaches of cosmology, this makes him a much more satisfying guide than most. |
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Children are being turned off chemistry and physics by the mad professors and pointy-headed boffins of popular mythology, according to a new study of attitudes to science. |
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Americans built a fighter, the P-51, with aerodynamics that seemed to defy the laws of physics. |
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A more illustrative example of the origin of that common usage from the history of physics might be the use of the concept of a quantum jump in the Bohr model of the atom. |
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Astronomy had its first close encounter with physics in the era of Kepler and Newton, but the consequences of that conjunction extended only to the limits of the solar system. |
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No prize had been awarded in physics since 1930, yet recent theoretical and experimental achievements had led to a revolutionary new quantum-mechanical depiction of the atom. |
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She is a student, ostensibly with a physics problem, but who flirts outrageously, dances to the bongos, and otherwise makes clear her availability. |
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I attended McMaster University for my Honors bachelor's degree in physics. |
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Some of the magnitudes of physics are speed, force, and time. |
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I suppose that this shows up how physical, Newtonian stuff can lead you quite logically to the Alice-in-Wonderland world of relativity and quantum physics. |
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No study in the history of physics, chemistry, biology or human anatomy and physiology has determined the concept of chi to be an accurate description of how the body works. |
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Wouldn't you rather be in a car that was designed from the ground up to be as safe as possible, rather than rely on raw physics to save your skin? |
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An independent calibration, traceable to it UK national standard, was carried out on the IL1400A radiometer and detector by the Gloucestershire medical physics service. |
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Certainly industrial chemistry was much more important than chemical warfare, rockets, jets, or atomic physics, which little influenced the course of the war. |
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And I have been able to do so because I have become increasingly convinced that culture, like the luminiferous ether of nineteenth-century physics, doesn't do much work. |
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Apparently some basic rule of physics about hot air rising has the consequence that the best time to go ballooning is a winter morning, when it's really cold. |
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Conventional economic theory follows a mathematical paradigm pioneered by classical physics, embodying smooth, differentiable functions, and dominant equilibria. |
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What may be the most impressive adaptation of archerfish is their ability to learn to overcome the physics of the refraction of light passing from air into water. |
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The physics curriculum works with fulcrums, levers, and pulleys, echoing in the physical world the rapid growth of arms and legs that teens experience at this age. |
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This volume contains a study of pressure and density, astronomical refraction, barometric pressure and the transmission of gravity based on this new philosophy of physics. |
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I said that I'd prefer particle physics, but astrophysics was fine too. |
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Muslims made many discoveries in mathematics, chemistry, physics, medicine, astronomy and psychology. |
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This paper reviews the recent progress in the studies of experimental rock mechanics and tectonophysics concerning seismology and physics of the Earth's interior in China. |
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In fact, we now know that Newton was in many ways a Renaissance man, working in theology, prophecy, and alchemy, as well as mathematics, optics, and physics. |
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High-level chemistry and physics went hand in hand with blue jeans and hard hats. |
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Astrochemistry is a broad and interdisciplinary emerging field at the intersection of the traditional disciplines of chemistry, physics, and astronomy. |
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From experience students require a grade A in mathematics at A2 level to be able to cope with the mathematical content of the physics courses abroad. |
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Their friendship began when Krauss, who was chairman of the physics department at case Western in Cleveland, sought out Epstein. |
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The two old friends were Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg, who at the time were the foremost authorities on atomic physics and atomic-bomb theory. |
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Now and then a few people, witting or unwitting postmodernists, who think that social constructs trump the laws of physics, are mowed down by logging trucks. |
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He also took his examinations to qualify as a teacher of mathematics and physics and, in 1872, he began teaching mathematics at a school in Weissenburg, Bavaria. |
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Once he had decided not to publish his physics, the Treatise on Man, which Descartes had intended as a kind of tailpiece to The World, had also to be put on one side. |
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The dynamic field of astrochemistry brings together ideas of physics, astrophysics, biology and chemistry to the study of molecules between stars, around stars and on planets. |
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In addition, there is a large programme to fund research on a wide range of topics, including biology, physics, chemistry, agronomy, and human and social sciences. |
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He made a number of contributions to mathematics, physics and astronomy. |
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So if Cold Fusion is real, I imagine some major physics needs a rethink. |
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For example, we can mathematize this world and study it in terms of mathematical physics. |
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However, since most modern astronomical research deals with subjects related to physics, modern astronomy could actually be called astrophysics. |
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For this reason, much effort is expended in trying to understand the physics of these components. |
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Iranian physics is especially strong in string theory, with many papers being published in Iran. |
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The Blinovitch limitation effect, however, appears to be a law of physics in the Whoniverse. |
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Axioms play a key role not only in mathematics, but also in other sciences, notably in theoretical physics. |
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In contrast, in physics a comparison with experiments always makes sense, since a falsified physical theory needs modification. |
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Engineers such as Arthur Woolf were trying to tackle an engineering problem with an imperfect understanding of the physics. |
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Galileo showed an appreciation for the relationship between mathematics, theoretical physics, and experimental physics. |
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To help pay her tuition, the college student began to tutor high school students in calculus and physics. |
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In popular lore, Feynman often comes off as the wild man of physics, throwing out one crazy idea after another in a frenzied search for truth. |
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Particle physics theory points toward weakly interacting massive particles, or WIMPs, as one of the most likely candidates. |
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The Quantum Quark is a close look at quantum chromodynamics that does not require an extensive mathematics or physics background of the reader. |
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The continual study of black holes may even lead the way to that holy grail of modern physics, a theory of quantum gravity. |
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At 14, he was admitted to the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, for a Phd programme in quantum physics. |
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Details of the 1903 Nobel Prize in physics awarded to Antoine Henri Becquerel, Pierre Curie, and Marie Curie. |
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Along with her husband and Becquerel, Curie was awarded in 1903 the Nobel Prize in physics for research into radioactivity. |
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Steve Benight, one of Tm's scientific founders and a leader in the physics and chemistry of DNA hybridization. |
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Although a Beotian concerning this matter, I am inclined to think that one cannot even enter quantum physics without overstepping such limits. |
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Rodgers is a member of the board of trustees at Dartmouth College, where he graduated as Salutatorian with degrees in both physics and chemistry. |
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Section 4 describes the five levels of the bioenergetic body within the context of discoveries in quantum physics. |
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Only in physics can a few quintillionths of a meter be cause for excitement. |
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The conundrum for anti-dialectical official physics is that the existence of antiparticle itself is problematic. |
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The existence of anti-particle as such is not a big problem for anti-dialectical official physics. |
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She was honored for her groundbreaking work in nuclear physics. |
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Albert Einstein is credited with making some of the greatest breakthroughs in modern physics. |
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In physical science, Aristotle studied anatomy, astronomy, embryology, geography, geology, meteorology, physics and zoology. |
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The new scientific method led to great contributions in the fields of astronomy, physics, biology, and anatomy. |
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Franklin was influential for his political activism and for his advances in physics. |
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Seven of his students, including his son George Paget Thomson, also became Nobel Prize winners either in physics or in chemistry. |
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At the end of his first year, he was awarded a Heginbottom Scholarship to study physics. |
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In January 1939, Meitner and her nephew Otto Frisch astounded the physics community with a paper that explained this result. |
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Hellman in 1997 to reward outstanding work in theoretical physics by FSU researchers. |
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As it was not possible to read mathematics there at the time, Hawking decided to study physics and chemistry. |
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Hawking returned to Cambridge in 1975 to a more academically senior post, as reader in gravitational physics. |
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In 2008 he received an Honorary Fellowship from Swansea University for his work in particle physics. |
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On 6 July 2012, Edinburgh University announced a new centre named after Professor Higgs to support future research in theoretical physics. |
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The university has also established a chair of theoretical physics in the name of Peter Higgs. |
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Penrose is known for his work in mathematical physics, in particular for his contributions to general relativity and cosmology. |
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This is what I see in Penrose's quest for a new basic principle of physics that will account for consciousness. |
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In 2004 he was awarded the De Morgan Medal for his wide and original contributions to mathematical physics. |
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His development of Twistor Theory has produced a beautiful and productive approach to the classical equations of mathematical physics. |
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At the age of 21, Crick earned a Bachelor of Science degree in physics from University College London. |
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Once a set of coherent units have been defined, other relationships in physics that use those units will automatically be true. |
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This motor is often demonstrated in physics experiments, brine substituting for toxic mercury. |
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It describes the system of physics started by Isaac Newton and many contemporary 17th century natural philosophers. |
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After Newton, classical mechanics became a principal field of study in mathematics as well as physics. |
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Some difficulties were discovered in the late 19th century that could only be resolved by more modern physics. |
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Since the end of the 20th century, the place of classical mechanics in physics has been no longer that of an independent theory. |
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Newton was the first to apply calculus to general physics and Leibniz developed much of the notation used in calculus today. |
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Appropriate as many mathematical techniques and metaphorical expressions from contemporary respectable science, primarily physics as possible. |
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The university is associated with eleven winners of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, five in physics and sixteen in medicine. |
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The faculty provides education and research in chemistry, informatics, physics, mathematics and telecommunications. |
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Despite his interest in this phenomenon, he disdained experimental work as in physics. |
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In addition to publishing some controversial writings on mathematics and physics, Hobbes also continued to produce philosophical works. |
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On the other hand, the Standard Model of Particle physics uses quantum field theory to describe all interactions. |
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Davies' and Gribbin's objections are shared by proponents of digital physics who view information rather than matter to be fundamental. |
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But to me his very spiritualism seemed more materialistic than his physics. |
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He had also read a great deal of history in English and had been taught arithmetic, physics and astronomy. |
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Russell supported his family during this time by writing popular books explaining matters of physics, ethics, and education to the layman. |
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Sir Isaac Newton's publication of the Principia Mathematica ushered in what is recognisable as modern physics. |
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For instance, Lancaster University has a global reputation for work in low temperature physics. |
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Galileo showed a remarkably modern appreciation for the proper relationship between mathematics, theoretical physics, and experimental physics. |
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In modern physics, action at a distance has been completely eliminated, except for subtle effects involving quantum entanglement. |
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In Newtonian physics, however, no such acceleration can occur unless at least one of the objects is being operated on by a force. |
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His discoveries helped usher in the era of modern physics, laying the foundation for such fields as special relativity and quantum mechanics. |
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Physical cosmology is the branch of physics and astrophysics that deals with the study of the physical origins and evolution of the Universe. |
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I minored in physics at university, so am acutely aware of atomic structure. |
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In 1929, he obtained the authorisation to teach mathematics and physics in secondary school, which he started doing. |
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Kirk and Wittgenstein struck up a friendship, with Wittgenstein giving him lessons in physics to help him pass a City and Guilds exam. |
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The discipline which is the ancestor of modern specializations like astronomy, biology, physics and chemistry was then called natural philosophy. |
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Of all European patent applications in the field of physics and electronics about eight per cent is from North Brabant. |
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The study of mathematics, physics, and in particular, of electricity, had captivated his imagination. |
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This apparent paradox is addressed in a theory that focuses on the physics of development. |
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Much research activity is interdisciplinary, involving collaborators in physics, computer science and engineering and partners in industry. |
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Through the centuries, Italy has fostered the scientific community that produced many major discoveries in physics and the other sciences. |
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Resonance in particle physics appears in similar circumstances to classical physics at the level of quantum mechanics and quantum field theory. |
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The barn is commonly used in describing the cross sectional area of interaction in nuclear physics. |
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Also listed is Pupin Hall, another National Historic Landmark, which houses the physics and astronomy departments. |
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In physics, the Coriolis force is an inertial force that acts on objects that are in motion relative to a rotating reference frame. |
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This means that rills exhibit hydraulic physics very different from water flowing through the deeper, wider channels of streams and rivers. |
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In physics, the discovery of nuclear fission has led to both nuclear weapons and nuclear power. |
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Nevertheless, empirical thermometry has serious drawbacks when judged as a basis for theoretical physics. |
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The field of plasma physics deals with phenomena of electromagnetic nature that involve very high temperatures. |
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The publication of their results is a call for help to pick holes in their methods, and save physics as we now know it. |
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It emphasizes the application of analytical techniques from physics, chemistry, and engineering. |
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The Russian physics school began with Lomonosov who proposed the law of conservation of matter preceding the energy conservation law. |
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It applies mathematics, physics, and chemistry, in an effort to explain the origin of those objects and phenomena and their evolution. |
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This new edition features extensive updates of radiobiology, physics and techniques, and an entire new section on spine metastases. |
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The Higgs boson discovery revolutionizes the world of physics. |
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He was also versed in the sciences of medicine, astronomy, geography, mathematics, physics and celestial mechanics. |
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The self-image is powered by the ignorant selfish ideas originally integrated by Satan into the physics of the brain. |
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The law of physics says solar wind turbulence should not be affected by the speed and direction of that wind. |
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The vice chancellor announced that the AIOU will soon start BSc program with physics, biology, chemistry or mathematic as a major subject. |
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But to what extent are quantification and mathematization necessary or sufficient for the remarkable achievements of physics? |
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In doing so, he minutely described and anticipated the entropy and atomism of quantum physics. |
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In a research by Jim Kiwanis and Kumis, simulated computerized patterns of learning and teaching procedures of physics were studied. |
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The year 1543 is, in fact, this author's terminus ad quem, and it is certainly important both for physics and astronomy. |
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This will take us on a detour through the physics literature of brane tilings which motivates further families of examples for future study. |
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Straight stick laparoscopy is great, but the laws of physics still only allow us to pronate, supinate. |
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Add to that a Gladiator-style colosseum,power-ups and realistic car physics in smash ups,and you have a game that can't help but be addictive. |
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It will help scientists study the effects of the space environment on physics and biology aboard the orbiting laboratory. |
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The food physics group at TNO has expertise in emulsion and foam properties, relating to both formation and stability. |
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When he was 22 he read Darwin's On the Origin of Species and a primer on physics. |
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Stephen Hawking is a leading light in physics, people say he's the greatest physicist since Einstein. |
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By using electrons and their antiparticles rather than protons, as the LHC does, physicists hope to gain a different perspective on the underlying physics. |
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Kelsey, Heintz, Sandoval, Chambers, Adolphi, and Paffett present this guide to radiation biology and physics for medical professionals using radiation in their practice. |
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It operates like the laws of physics, without external intervention, on every being in all six realms of existence including human beings and gods. |
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Denis Cohen, 66, graduated from the Higher National School of Electronics and Radioelectricity of Bordeaux and holds a degree in mathematics and physics. |
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These unimpressive study habits made sitting his finals a challenge, and he decided to answer only theoretical physics questions rather than those requiring factual knowledge. |
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I will take this unique opportunity to test birth, life and death scenarii of Landau quasiparticles and observe the emergence of many-body physics. |
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However, by the late 1970s and following the publication of further research, the discovery was widely accepted as a significant breakthrough in theoretical physics. |
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Weisskopf, a protege of physicist Niels Bohr, was lauded both for his theoretical work in physics and his role in explaining science and its meaning to the public. |
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Observational astronomy is focused on acquiring data from observations of astronomical objects, which is then analyzed using basic principles of physics. |
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Northumbria University's solar physics research group is also involved in an international project to build the world's biggest and most revolutionary solar telescope. |
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If some amount of energy is deposited in a tenuous medium in space, soft X-rays are expected to be radiated in many cases due to fundamental physics. |
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Jonny puts his success down to reading about quantum physics. |
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In classical physics, energy flows in a continuum, but in quantum physics it comes in chunks or quanta, which can only be described mathematically. |
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In addition paleontology often uses techniques derived from other sciences, including biology, osteology, ecology, chemistry, physics and mathematics. |
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At the same time, he was also making a transition in his approach to physics, becoming more intuitive and speculative rather than insisting on mathematical proofs. |
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Quantum physics, despite having been with us now for over a century, continues to mystify and challenge physicists, philosophers, and the general public alike. |
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They used tiny semiconducting crystals that contain two separate reservoirs of electrons to explore the different influences of both classical and quantum physics. |
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His expertise in physics, material science and characterization will play a key role in meeting today's application challenges and maintaining NDC's leadership position. |
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These derive from a deep understanding of what is relevant to physics and astronomy, and especially from a mastery of wholly new mathematical techniques. |
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The Higgs mechanism is generally accepted as an important ingredient in the Standard Model of particle physics, without which certain particles would have no mass. |
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Simmons proposes two major concepts out of contemporary quantum physics, namely, entanglement or relational holism and superposition or complementarity. |
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The standard magnetic trap of the Ioffe-Pritchard type that is widely used in atomic physics consists of a magnetic quadruple with two solenoids at its edges. |
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However, an unguided missile obeys exactly the same physics as a baseball, but can travel far enough and be in the air long enough to experience the effect of Coriolis force. |
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Variations of the knuckleball are also used in baseball and volleyball, so many players and coaches want to understand the physics at play during its zigzag trajectory. |
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Attosecond science fuses chemistry and physics to arrive at the innovative idea of using intense, ultra-short laser pulses to image and even ultimately control molecules. |
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It may sound like a strange setup, but the somewhat kooky concept works well for explaining a field of physics that can sound, well, kooky to the uninitiated. |
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There's no such thing as a 100 percent-pure crystal, though, and diamond's impurities are in fact Marilyn Monroe beauty marks that make it attractive for physics. |
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In May, 1,500 juniors and seniors from the Houston Independent School District explored the world of physics with NASA astronauts and rocket scientists. |
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Fluid dynamics of laminar flow and the physics of the boundary layer are discussed, and an integral method for solving the relevant equations is presented. |
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He is commonly known for Occam's razor, the methodological principle that bears his name, and also produced significant works on logic, physics, and theology. |
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The current understanding of gravity is based on Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity, which is formulated within the framework of classical physics. |
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Following World War II research was concerned with mechanical and nuclear physics, later moving into air density, experimental rocket launching equipment, and radar. |
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Instead, they envision that as the universe evolved according to the steady laws of physics, the inherent possibility for W and Z bosons to become massive was realized. |
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Many of the accepted notions of a unified theory of physics since the 1970s assume, and to some degree depend upon, the existence of the graviton. |
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Aimed at astronomy and physics majors, it offers thorough coverage of galactic structure and evolution, active galaxies, cosmology, and the history of the universe. |
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Many physics discoveries of the past century have emerged from giant particle accelerators costing up to billions of dollars and sprawling over acres. |
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However, glaciers have to behave according to the laws of ice physics, and a long narrow lobate surge with a flat long profile would be difficult to explain. |
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To this aim Taylor differential algebraic and Taylor model techniques have been transferred in the last decade from beam physics field to astrodynamics. |
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Asked once by a student whether he was anti-social, the chemistry and physics instructor Fay replied that he was completely asocial, Bradley said. |
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I summarize an extensive ATLAS and CMS electroweak physics program that involves a variety of single boson, diboson, triboson, and vector boson scattering measurements. |
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Scaling factors also account for the relative disadvantage of the small cyclist in descending, although this is a result of physics, not physiology. |
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Later process controls inventions involved basic physics principles. |
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Through his research on the magnetic field around a conductor carrying a direct current, Faraday established the basis for the concept of the electromagnetic field in physics. |
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In physics, resonance is a phenomenon in which a vibrating system or external force drives another system to oscillate with greater amplitude at specific frequencies. |
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Quebec is considered as one of world leaders in fundamental scientific research, having produced ten Nobel laureates in either physics, chemistry, or medicine. |
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Presleyterianism teaches us that there is no discrepancy between science and theology, no disparity between putting your trust in physics and technology or believing in Elvis. |
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In the process of searching for a solution to the problem of determining longitude, many scientists added to the knowledge of astronomy and physics. |
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The ancient Greeks pioneered in many fields that rely on systematic thought, including biology, geometry, history, philosophy, physics and mathematics. |
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Argentine scientists are still on the cutting edge in fields such as nanotechnology, physics, computer sciences, molecular biology, oncology, ecology, and cardiology. |
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In chemistry and physics, atomic theory is a scientific theory of the nature of matter, which states that matter is composed of discrete units called atoms. |
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Not to encourage antiintellectual behavior, but if she can't avoid being valedictorian any other way, tell her to take a dive on that last physics quiz. |
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The field of science which studies subatomic particles is particle physics, and it is in this field that physicists hope to discover the true fundamental nature of matter. |
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She is equally conversant with Shakespeare and the laws of physics. |
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Wells's contemporary political impact was limited, excluding his fiction's positivist stance on the leaps that could be made by physics towards world peace. |
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Scientific advancement and the discovery of new concepts later allowed for powered flight and advancements in medicine, chemistry, physics, and engineering. |
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The physics of car crashes would not let Tom Cruise walk away like that. |
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Various new physics models, e.g., theories of compositeness, can accommodate the color singlet leptohadrons that interact with the leptons, quarks, leptoquarks, etc. |
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The textbook set a standard for early education in mathematical physics. |
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He was knighted in England in 1945 for his achievements in physics. |
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