Properties
in sentence
359 examples of Properties in a sentence
So that's it: just five seconds of regular video, while we bang on this surface, and we're going to use the vibrations in that video to learn about the structural and material
properties
of our object, and we're going to use that information to create something new and interactive.
All right, it's nice that babies will generalize
properties
of blue balls to yellow balls, and it's impressive that babies can learn from imitating us, but we've known those things about babies for a very long time.
You know about objects and their
properties.
So, when I have an experience that I describe as a red tomato, that experience is actually an accurate reconstruction of the
properties
of a real red tomato that would exist even if I weren't looking.
But Murray Gell-Mann yesterday talked about emergent properties; another name for them could be "architecture" as a metaphor for taking the same old material and thinking about non-obvious, non-simple ways of combining it.
Now, if we want to bring a driver assistance system into a car, say with collision mitigation braking, we're going to put some package of technology on there, and that's this curve, and it's going to have some operating properties, but it's never going to avoid all of the accidents, because it doesn't have that capability.
So of course, with natural cells, you can only get them to make proteins with the natural amino acids, and so the
properties
those proteins can have, the applications they could be developed for, must be limited by the nature of those amino acids that the protein's built from.
They have four
properties.
We printed its surface out of 44 different properties, varying in rigidity, opacity and color, corresponding to pressure points on the human body.
We thought if we could tune its properties, we could generate structures that are multifunctional out of a single part.
The robot would vary material
properties
on the fly and create these 12-foot-long structures made of a single material, 100 percent recyclable.
We then started growing these channels on the human body, varying material
properties
according to the desired functionality.
Imagine that we could try to engineer humans that have enhanced properties, such as stronger bones, or less susceptibility to cardiovascular disease or even to have
properties
that we would consider maybe to be desirable, like a different eye color or to be taller, things like that.
So the implications for science are enormous, because here you could find, for example, microbes that could be useful to resolve diseases in medicine, or you could find even a new kind of material with unknown
properties.
It has wonderful
properties.
However, recent theories in physics, including one called string theory, are now telling us there could be countless other universes, built on different types of particles, with different properties, obeying different laws.
Some physicists think the space-time continuum is literally infinite, and that it contains an infinite number of so-called pocket universes with varying
properties.
Because of its unique chemical and physical properties, water is absolutely essential for all life as we know it.
Is it because Mendeleev arranged elements with similar
properties
together?
One of the most striking
properties
about life is that it has color.
Using this assumption, he was able to explain some
properties
of light.
But, we can't just forget about
properties
like interference, either.
It's a great way to combine values that have wide ranges and represent very different
properties.
In other words, the brain seems to be tracking low-level, statistical
properties
of behavior in order to make complex decisions regarding other people's character.
These are
properties
of the universe that we can measure, and they're extremely dangerous because if they were different, even by a tiny bit, then the universe as we know it would not exist.
It's called the Reynolds number, and it depends on simple
properties
like the size of the swimmer, its speed, the density of the fluid, and the stickiness, or the viscosity, of the fluid.
Through reform in the way we landscape our surfaces and our properties, we can reduce outdoor water use by about 50 percent, thereby increasing the water supply by 25 percent.
But most will show two telltale properties: sudden thinning at a threshold force, and more gradual thinning after a small force is applied for a long time.
It's a limit on what
properties
an object can have, built into the fundamental structure of the universe itself.
We don't see these wave
properties
for everyday objects because the wavelength decreases as the momentum increases.
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