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Page "Electrostatics" ¶ 31
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From and Faraday's
** Eddy currents: From Faraday's law of induction, the changing magnetic field can induce circulating loops of electric current in the conductive metal core.
* Eddy currents: From Faraday's law of induction, the changing magnetic field induces circulating electric currents inside nearby conductors, called eddy currents.

From and law
From the point of view of State-centric law, extraordinary procedures ( usually international courts ) may prosecute such crimes.
From 1662 the Colony of Virginia, followed by others, incorporated into law that the children took their mother's status, by the principle of partus sequitur ventrem ; all children born to enslaved mothers were born into slavery, regardless of their father's status or ancestry.
From these hypotheses, it is also possible to prove that there is only one God in each world by Leibniz's law, the identity of indiscernibles: two or more objects are identical ( are one and the same ) if they have all their properties in common, and so, there would only be one object in each world that possesses property G. Gödel did not attempt to do so however, as he purposely limited his proof to the issue of existence, rather than uniqueness.
From the previous passages, it is argued that in the beginning, Paul and Barnabas were getting along with each other ; but that at the end, they started to depart in their beliefs to give to the importance of the Jewish law.
From the age of seventeen he spent three years in Paris studying law.
From the 1950s to 1970s, he wrote a comprehensive guide to Jewish law that was used to teach halakha at the JTSA.
From 1963 to 1971 Reno worked as a lawyer for two Miami law firms.
From the law of excluded middle, formula ✸ 2. 1 in Principia Mathematica, Whitehead and Russell derive some of the most powerful tools in the logician's argumentation toolkit.
From 12th to 14th century, large numbers of Germans and Flemings settled the area ( Ostsiedlung ), importing German law and improved agricultural techniques.
From June 26 until December 22, 2006, two children, Ammar ( 12-13 ) and Sara ( 10-11 ), lived in the Dutch embassy in Damascus because of a child custody dispute between the Dutch mother, supported by Dutch law and the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction, and the Syrian father, supported by Syrian law ( Syria is no participant of this convention ).
From 1832 to 1833 he studied law at the University of Göttingen where he was a member of the Corps Hannovera before enrolling at the University of Berlin ( 1833 – 35 ).
From this has evolved the modern conception of property as a right enforced by positive law, in the expectation that this will produce more wealth and better standards of living.
From 1904 until 1916, he assisted Cardinal Pietro Gasparri in his codification of canon law with the Department of Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs.
From this commanding position, the Prime Minister directs the law-making process, enacting into law his party ’ s programme.
From 1846 onwards the establishments in the United Kingdom were gradually reduced, while the last vestige of the British quarantine law was removed by the Public Health Act 1896, which repealed the Quarantine Act 1825 ( with dependent clauses of other acts ), and transferred from the privy council to the Local Government Board the powers to deal with ships arriving infected with yellow fever or plague, the powers to deal with cholera ships having been already transferred by the Public Health Act 1875.
From Marconi's experiments, the phenomenon that transmission range is proportional to the square of antenna height is known as " Marconi's law ".
From 1977 to 1981, during the Carter Administration, Giuliani practiced law at the Patterson, Belknap, Webb and Tyler law firm, as chief of staff to his previous DC boss, Ace Tyler.
From Newton's second law, the acceleration,, of a vehicle is simply:
From the 17th century Roman law, in Germany, had been heavily influenced by domestic ( common ) law, and it was called usus modernus Pandectarum.
From the 9th century, the power to interpret and refine law in traditional Islamic societies was in the hands of the scholars ( ulema ).
From the beginning, Christian theological learning was therefore a central component in these institutions, as was the study of Church or Canon law ): universities played an important role in training people for ecclesiastical offices, in helping the church pursue the clarification and defence of its teaching, and in supporting the legal rights of the church over against secular rulers.

From and assumption
From an estimated mass of 25 g for a zero-magnitude meteorite, the other masses are derived with the assumption of a mass decrease by a factor of 2.512 for each unit increase in magnitude.
From the assumption of small disturbances we have
From the beginning he ruled with the assumption that he alone was acceptable to the Soviet Union as Finnish President.
From a theoretical standpoint, the main assumption of the Kalman filter is that the underlying system is a linear dynamical system and that all error terms and measurements have a Gaussian distribution ( often a multivariate Gaussian distribution ).
From the 1840s, following the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi and the assumption of British sovereignty, large numbers of Europeans began to settle permanently in New Zealand.
From the assumption of power by the Communists and the proclamation of the PRC until 1971, the ROC Government remained the representative of China before the UN, although it had lost almost all of the territory.
From Motherwell's own words, the reason he went to Harvard was because he wanted to be a painter while his father urged him pursue a more secure career: " And finally after months of really a cold war he made a very generous agreement with me that if I would get a Ph. D. so that I would be equipped to teach in a college as an economic insurance, he would give me fifty dollars a week for the rest of my life to do whatever I wanted to do on the assumption that with fifty dollars I could not starve but it would be no inducement to last.
From this view strong atheists have made the assumption that the concept of God actually contains an expressible or thinkable proposition.
From about 1986 and onwards, Peacocke abandoned this assumption, arguing that some mental states, in particular perceptual experiences and representational states implicated in subpersonal information processing ( for example, in the subconscious parsing of heard speech ), have non-conceptual intentional content.
From the mid-1960s on, the traditional type of planetary romance set in the Solar System fell out of favor ; as technological advances revealed most local worlds to be hostile to life, new planetary stories have usually been set on extrasolar planets, generally through the assumption of some form of faster-than-light travel.
From this assumption, one could conclude that the present trend will continue.
By step 2, we have a complete and precise description of the character table of the CA group G. From this, and using the fact that G has odd order, sufficient information is available to obtain estimates for | G | and arrive at a contradiction to the assumption that G is simple.
From the dates of Albert ’ s life, we can assume that Dietrich was still young when Albert ’ s career was almost at its end, and no assumption can be made to whether or not Dietrich ever met or studied under Albert.
From his " Technology and Invention in the Middle Ages " of 1940, through his " Dynamo and Virgin Reconsidered " of 1958, to his Medieval Technology and Social Change ( Oxford University Press, 1962 ), his work refuted the assumption that the Middle Ages were too preoccupied with theology and / or chivalry to concern themselves with technology, the assumption behind Henry Adams ' antitheses of Virgin vs. dynamo, but widespread elsewhere as well.
From July 9, 2004 to September 1, 2004, Lieutenant General Cartwight served as Acting Commander, U. S. Strategic Command while awaiting official assumption of office and promotion as Strategic Command's new commander.

From and implies
From the linearity property it is derived that implies while from the positive-definiteness axiom we obtain the converse, implies
From (*) this implies
which implies that From the boundary condition one finds
For any two propositions and, the formula says that materially implies while says that strictly implies .< ref > Graham Priest, An Introduction to Non-Classical Logic: From if to is, 2 < sup > nd </ sup > ed, Cambridge University Press, 2008, ISBN 0-521-85433-4, p. 72.
From the Einstein field equations ( with zero cosmological constant ), this implies that ( after contracting and putting ).
From the characters ' dialogue, it can be assumed he is one of six Kelso boys and also has a younger sister, which Hyde implies to be fairly unattractive.
From an evolutionary standpoint, genes with overlapping functions implies minimal, if any, selective pressures acting on these genes.
From this work a RR Lyrae derived distance modulus of 19. 55 is found which implies a distance of 81 kpc.
From the mid to late seventeenth century, French art is more often referred to by the term " Classicism " which implies an adherence to certain rules of proportion and sobriety uncharacteristic of the Baroque, as it was practiced in southern and eastern Europe during the same period.

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