Motion
in sentence
1130 examples of Motion in a sentence
I'm sticking in my arm, I'm giving them a big juicy blood meal, I'm shaking them off, and we follow them through time to see these mosquitoes get very, very sick indeed, here shown in fast
motion.
If we pull all the way back, we start seeing the entire galaxy here, kind of slowly in
motion.
We have frictionless
motion.
Now, I'll just give you a little taste of what it looks like in
motion
with a video which shows just one part of the CPU mechanism working.
I present to you a new type of photography, femto-photography, a new imaging technique so fast that it can create slow
motion
videos of light in
motion.
How does light look in slow
motion?
But I'm slowing down in this video by a factor of 10 billion, so you can see the light in
motion.
It's about how our brain is tricked into seeing a persistence of vision that creates a
motion
picture, and one of the things I had to do is, we — Sasha Baron Cohen is a very clever, very smart guy, comedian, wanted to basically do an homage to the kind of the Buster Keaton sort of slapstick things, and he wanted his leg brace to get caught on a moving train.
And that simple
motion
of forwards and upwards, it's the most basic direction of progress we humans recognize.
Richard Serra had to let go of painting in order to embark on this playful exploration that led him to the work that he's known for today: huge curves of steel that require our time and
motion
to experience.
It's in slow
motion.
So digging deeper into this with the Science and Technology Council of the Academy of
Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences reveals some truth behind the trickery.
Initially, it does some random motion, and then it tries to figure out what it might look like.
So there's a new block that says how much video
motion
there is, and then, if there's so much video motion, it will then tell the balloon to pop.
The green trace at the bottom is the membrane potential of a neuron in the fly's brain, and you'll see the fly start to fly, and the fly is actually controlling the rotation of that visual pattern itself by its own wing motion, and you can see this visual interneuron respond to the pattern of wing
motion
as the fly flies.
The teacher sets the process in
motion
and then she stands back in awe and watches as learning happens.
And the way it works is, as you move your body through the world, if, as an engineer, I can make a system that can measure that motion, and then present to you sensations over time that kind of make sense, that match up with what you might feel in the real world, I can fool you into thinking you're touching something even though there's nothing there.
It has a force sensor, so we can tell how hard you're pushing; it has
motion
tracking, so we can tell exactly where you've moved it; and it has a vibration sensor, an accelerometer, inside, that detects the shaking back and forth of the tool that lets you know that's a piece of canvas and not a piece of silk or something else.
It's a genetic disorder, and it involves a twisting motion, and these children get progressively more and more twisting until they can't breathe, until they get sores, urinary infections, and then they die.
In other words, as I might seek to demonstrate, if you could achieve the impossible, the equivalent of perpetual motion, you could design a carbon-free house, for example.
This maneuver is going to happen so quickly that we can't use position feedback to correct the
motion
during execution.
Students can use this as a tool to learn about the complex concepts such as planetary motion, physics, and unlike computer screens or textbooks, this is a real, tangible experience that you can touch and feel, and it's very powerful.
Its
motion
pushes the fluid within the long chambers of the cochlea.
And that
motion
of building an institution out of a moment of conversation and listening is actually a lot of what my firm, Local Projects, is doing with our engagements in general.
Now this happens very fast, in the blink of an eye, so, together with LG, we captured this
motion
with a camera that is able to capture more than 3,000 frames per second.
But let me show you a slow
motion
in a completely darkened room of what I just showed you in this live demonstration.
It must always be in
motion.
She was wobbling like this for quite a long time, and notice this twisting
motion.
We're in constant
motion.
And we've put intestinal human cells in a gut on a chip, and they're under constant peristaltic motion, this trickling flow through the cells, and we can mimic many of the functions that you actually would expect to see in the human intestine.
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