Phenomena
in sentence
220 examples of Phenomena in a sentence
These are two very different
phenomena.
And what we found was this curious phenomena, that caregiver speech would systematically dip to a minimum, making language as simple as possible, and then slowly ascend back up in complexity.
If we look at Islamists, if we look at the phenomenon of far-right fascists, one thing they've been very good at, one thing that they've actually been exceeding in, is communicating across borders, using technologies to organize themselves, to propagate their message and to create truly global
phenomena.
We are a company in the field of automation, and we'd like to do very lightweight structures because that's energy efficient, and we'd like to learn more about pneumatics and air flow
phenomena.
So we were looking for a much more objective way to assess this
phenomena.
But the way we react to different combinations of these
phenomena
is complex and emotional and not totally understood.
As the answer is sought, other
phenomena
are typically discovered and other questions are asked.
The second strategy of research is to study a subject broadly searching for unknown
phenomena
or patterns of known
phenomena
like a hunter in what we call "the naturalist's trance," the researcher of mind is open to anything interesting, any quarry worth taking.
Now that's the Tropic of Cancer in the north and the Tropic of Capricorn in the south, that much I knew, but I was surprised to learn this little fact: Those are not cartographers' lines, like latitude or the borders between nations, they are astronomical
phenomena
caused by the Earth's tilt, and they change.
So while disgust, along with the other basic emotions, are universal phenomena, it just really is true that some people are easier to disgust than others.
And as an anthropologist, I see these differences in experience being rooted in the cultural and social world through which we define the
phenomena
around us.
Those three projects, they're based on very simple scientific phenomena, such as magnetism, the sound waves, or over here, the physical properties of a substance, and what I'm trying to do is I'm trying to use these
phenomena
and show them in a poetic and unseen way, and therefore invite the viewer to pause for a moment and think about all the beauty that is constantly surrounding us.
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.
Now, it's often said that getting closer and closer to the fundamental laws by examining
phenomena
at low energies, and then higher energies, and then higher energies, or short distances, and then shorter distances, and then still shorter distances, and so on, is like peeling the skin of an onion.
And so what happens is that the new phenomena, the new skins, the inner skins of the slightly smaller skins of the onion that we get to, resemble the slightly larger ones.
They’re also useful for the study of atomic and subatomic phenomena, which requires measuring incredibly tiny fluctuations in the energy of atoms.
Ultracold atoms have already allowed scientists to study
phenomena
like Bose-Einstein condensation, in which atoms are cooled almost to absolute zero and become a rare new state of matter.
You could apply that to the human brain in explaining some of the behaviors and the functions of the human brain as emergent phenomena: how we walk, how we talk, how we play chess, all these questions about behavior.
In the 19th century, Maxwell figured out that you can't explain electromagnetic
phenomena
in terms of the existing fundamentals — space, time, mass, Newton's laws — so he postulated fundamental laws of electromagnetism and postulated electric charge as a fundamental element that those laws govern.
And it turns out, there's a lot of
phenomena
we can reveal and magnify with our new motion microscope.
So as scientists, we started wondering, what other types of physical
phenomena
produce tiny motions that we could now use our cameras to measure?
Surreal
phenomena
within the fictional village of Macondo intertwine seamlessly with events taking place in the real country of Colombia.
It's a way of looking for natural explanations for all
phenomena.
In this case, supposedly, these messages are hidden in electronic
phenomena.
And so this technology is really powerful because it takes these
phenomena
that we normally have to experience through touch and it lets us capture them visually and non-invasively.
In other words: Are there processes, mechanisms,
phenomena
in living organisms that can only be explained with a helping hand from quantum mechanics?
But as I mentioned at the start, in the last 10 years, there have been experiments emerging, showing where some of these certain
phenomena
in biology do seem to require quantum mechanics.
This is one of the best-known
phenomena
in the quantum world, quantum tunneling.
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