Objects
in sentence
927 examples of Objects in a sentence
Gravity increases proportionally to the mass of the
objects
involved.
So, the laws of physics have this special property, that physical
objects
as unlike each other as they could possibly be can, nevertheless, embody the same mathematical and causal structure and to do it more and more so over time.
Unlike other objects, the speed of light is always constant regardless of an observer’s reference frame.
The human hand, in manipulation of objects, is the hand in search of a brain; the brain is in search of a hand; and play is the medium by which those two are linked in the best way.
I want to point out here at this point that I've spent my life obsessed by
objects
and the stories that they tell, and this was the very latest one.
Again, like I said, my life has been about being fascinated by
objects
and the stories that they tell, and also making them for myself, obtaining them, appreciating them and diving into them.
Any unit in space-time would be so small that most things would travel through it without disruption— not just
objects
large enough to be visible to the naked eye, but also molecules, atoms, and even electrons and most of the other subatomic particles we’ve discovered.
And so I decided to put all the paints aside for a while, and to ask this question, which was: "Why and how do
objects
acquire value for us?" How does a shirt that I know thousands of people wear, a shirt like this one, how does it somehow feel like it's mine?
And this confusion of images and
objects
was really part of the way I was trying to make sense of materials.
If we're experiencing time through materials, what happens when images and
objects
become confused in space?
So each of the piles of
objects
go right up to one centimeter to the tip of that pendulum.
To a computer scientist, all you see is just a little bit of information being exchanged by a tiny handful of meaningful entities or
objects.
You know, of course, they are related to this combination of at least two of them being, you know, design
objects.
Well, a major challenge is the liver, because the liver is the body's filtration system, and the liver recognizes and destroys foreign objects, such as viruses, bacteria and also nanoparticles.
And what's true for
objects
is true for other people.
Expanding on the idea that the 2D surface of an event horizon can store quantum information, this principle suggests that the very boundary of the observable universe is also a 2D surface encoded with information about real, 3D
objects.
In our biosphere, molecule-sized objects, genes, control vastly disproportionate resources.
From the human perspective, the only alternative to that living hell of static societies is continual creation of new ideas, behaviors, new kinds of
objects.
What I mean by other worlds is, for example, planets, such as Venus or Mercury, but also objects, such as comets.
What is so difficult and challenging is that we are also the
objects
of these changes.
Having a native speaker allow you to deconstruct their grammar, by translating these sentences into past, present, future, will show you subject, object, verb, placement of indirect, direct objects, gender and so forth.
But you can do it through playing with material
objects.
From our early work on 4D printing, where we printed objects, dipped them underwater, and they transform, to our active auxetics that respond to temperature and sunlight, to our more recent work on active textiles that respond to body temperature and change porosity, to our rapid liquid printing work where we print inflatable structures that morph based on air pressure and go from one shape to another, or our self-assembly work where we dip
objects
underwater, they respond to wave energy and assemble themselves into precise
objects
like furniture.
Large
objects
filled with sand, we'd place them underwater, they're just really simple geometries.
And it's these fascinating objects, but also horrifying objects, each with their own history, that I use to make my ephemeral, environmental artworks.
It has stored, recorded, can fastly retrieve the meanings of thousands, tens of thousands of objects, actions, and their relationships in the world.
So even though Pluto turned out not to be the planet it was originally thought to be, it was the first discovery of what is now known to be thousands of tiny, icy
objects
in orbit beyond the planets.
I was so excited by this idea, by the idea that we could look at the fossil history of the birth of the Sun, that I spent the next decade looking for more
objects
with orbits like Sedna.
But my colleagues, Chad Trujillo and Scott Sheppard, did a better job, and they have now found several
objects
with orbits like Sedna, which is super exciting.
But what's even more interesting is that they found that all these
objects
are not only on these distant, elongated orbits, they also share a common value of this obscure orbital parameter that in celestial mechanics we call argument of perihelion.
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