Particles
in sentence
521 examples of Particles in a sentence
Can we do it another way, using the language of
particles
around a nucleus, and talk about the body as an energy center?
"I" am just a collection of
particles
that is arranged into this pattern, then will decompose and be available, all of its constituent parts, to nature, to reorganize into another pattern.
We have an electromagnetic field around the Earth, and it's constantly bombarded by high-energy particles, like protons.
Solar flares are enormous magnetic outbursts from the Sun that bombard the Earth with high-speed subatomic
particles.
There's about a hundred of these basic ingredients, and they're all made from three smaller particles: protons, neutrons, electrons.
And this is a sheet of acrylic infused with colorless light-diffusing
particles.
He'll run back into his house, and he will contaminate his drinking water and his food and his environment with whatever diseases he may be carrying by fecal
particles
that are on his fingers and feet.
We linguists call things like that pragmatic
particles.
There's a warm, moist wind blowing at your back and the smell of the earth, the wheat, the grass, the charged
particles.
And these molecules high up in the atmosphere of Titan get broken down, and their products join together to make haze
particles.
But these haze particles, it was surmised, before we got there with Cassini, over billions and billions of years, gently drifted down to the surface and coated the surface in a thick organic sludge.
And then, when we took additional pictures, we discovered that from these fractures are issuing jets of fine, icy
particles
extending hundreds of miles into space.
The source of a sound creates vibrations that travel as waves of pressure through
particles
in air, liquids, or solids.
That's a ball of water, and those are dirt
particles.
Give it up for the fundamental particle that bequeaths all other fundamental
particles
their mass.
And he postulated a suggestion that there's this infinite, incredibly small field stretching throughout the universe, and as other
particles
go through those
particles
and interact, that's where they get their mass.
And it's got tiny little
particles
of metal in it, which makes it magnetic.
This is due to the attraction and the repulsion of the individual
particles
inside the liquid.
In the eye of a theoretical physicist, the Higgs boson is a clever explanation of how some elementary
particles
gain mass, but it seems a fairly unsatisfactory and incomplete solution.
We were expecting new
particles
and new phenomena accompanying the Higgs boson.
Instead, so far, the measurements coming from the LHC show no signs of new
particles
or unexpected phenomena.
But for the moment, since we have found no evidence for new phenomena, let us suppose that the
particles
that we know today, including the Higgs boson, are the only elementary
particles
in nature, even at energies much larger than what we have explored so far.
And some elementary
particles
interact with this substance, gaining energy in the process.
I started from a hypothesis, that the known
particles
are all there is in the universe, even beyond the domain explored so far.
It was calculated in 2009 that the 15 largest ships pollute in terms of
particles
and soot and noxious gases as much as all the cars in the world.
Moving meerkats are like random
particles
whose unique rule is one of alignment.
When these
particles
get to the road, they sense some kind of obstacle, and they bounce against it.
And in fact, this model is obviously false, because in reality, meerkats are anything but random
particles.
So it seems there are already fine
particles
that are levitated up to what we call the mesosphere, about 100 kilometers up, that already have this effect.
Finally, we could make the
particles
migrate to over the poles, so we could arrange the climate engineering so it really focused on the poles.
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