Universe
in sentence
1546 examples of Universe in a sentence
It's in this prison
universe
that you have all around you.
And that kick crowned, basically, 30 years of basic research studying how the brain, how this amazing
universe
that we have between our ears that is only comparable to
universe
that we have above our head because it has about 100 billion elements talking to each other through electrical brainstorms, what Juliano accomplished took 30 years to imagine in laboratories and about 15 years to plan.
Through nature, the nature of the
universe
and the nature of man, we shall seek truth.
(Music with lyrics) We are 13.7 billion light years from the edge of the observable
universe.
When we think about the dreams we have, and the dent we want to leave in the universe, it is striking to see how big of an overlap there is between the dreams that we have, and projects that never happen.
In a
universe
of adversity these stars stuck together, And though days became nights the memories would last forever, Whether the weatherman said it or not, it would be fine, 'Cause even behind the clouds the kid could still shine.
So the question now is, how do you want to go out and experience your
universe?
And the basic idea is that there's this law of attraction, and your thoughts have this vibrating energy that goes out into the
universe
and then you attract good things to happen to you.
Even in just the past few years, we've greatly expanded our knowledge of how Earth fits within the context of our
universe.
I study planetary habitability as influenced by stars with the hopes of finding the places in the
universe
where we might discover life beyond our own planet.
Now, as somebody who is deeply embedded in the search for life in the universe, I can tell you that the more you look for planets like Earth, the more you appreciate our own planet itself.
Many years ago, the physicist Enrico Fermi asked that, given the fact that our
universe
has been around for a very long time and we expect that there are many planets within it, we should have found evidence for alien life by now.
You're looking at a fly-through of the Hubble Space Telescope Ultra-Deep Field, one of the most distant images of our
universe
ever observed.
As an astrophysicist, I have the awesome privilege of studying some of the most exotic objects in our
universe.
What makes blazars so special is that they're some of the
universe'
s most efficient particle accelerators, transporting incredible amounts of energy throughout a galaxy.
As we more confidently localize where these gamma ray blobs are forming, we can better understand how jets are being accelerated, and ultimately reveal the dynamic processes by which some of the most fascinating objects in our
universe
are formed.
Who knew that chasing after the
universe
would ground me so deeply to my mission here on Earth.
In a few months, the world is also going to celebrate the launch of a new invention from Microsoft Research, which I think is going to have as profound an impact on the way we view the
universe
as Galileo did four centuries ago.
The WorldWide Telescope takes the best images from the world's greatest telescopes on Earth and in space, and has woven them seamlessly to produce a holistic view of the
universe.
It's going to change the way we do astronomy, it's going to change the way we teach astronomy and I think most importantly it's going to change the way we see ourselves in the
universe.
In 1920, for example, you weren't allowed to drink; if you were a woman, you weren't allowed to vote; and if you looked up at the stars and the Milky Way on a summer night, what you saw was thought to be the entire
universe.
In fact, the head of Harvard's observatory back then gave a great debate in which he argued that the Milky Way Galaxy was the entire
universe.
We can see all the way out to the edge of the observable universe, all the way back in time, almost to the moment of the Big Bang itself.
We see black holes at the heart of our galaxy, in the Milky Way, and elsewhere in the universe, where time itself seems to stand still.
But until now, our view of the
universe
has been disconnected and fragmented, and I think that many of the marvelous stories that nature has to tell us have fallen through the cracks.
First, it enables you to experience the universe: the WorldWide Telescope, for me, is a kind of magic carpet that lets you navigate through the
universe
where you want to go.
Second: you can tour the
universe
with astronomers as your guides.
And I'm not talking here about just experts who are telling you what you're seeing, but really people who are passionate about the various nooks and crannies of the universe, who can share their enthusiasm and can make the
universe
a welcoming place.
And in telling stories, each of us is going to understand the
universe
in our own way.
We're going to have a personal
universe.
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