Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Electric current" ¶ 55
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

analogy and is
The specific analogy to the dilemma of love is the problem of the `` breakthrough '' in the realm of art.
Perhaps it is only an analogy, but one of the most obvious differences between cheap fiction and fiction of an enduring quality is the development of a theme or story with leisure and anticipation.
Much criticism has been leveled at this rather forced analogy, but what is equally significant is Adams' complete acceptance of the Biblical record as `` good and trustworthy history ''.
Although the Af calculation is obvious by analogy with that for gravitational field and osmotic pressure, it is interesting to confirm it by a method which can be generalized to include related effects.
This hypothesis is evolved in analogy to the demonstrated action of organic actives in detergency.
It is not a farfetched analogy to say that this is what Thomas did to poetry.
This transuranic element of the actinide series is located in the periodic table below the lanthanide element europium, and thus by analogy was named after another continent, America.
" His term for analogy is Latin analogia.
The analogy is said of being in many different ways, but the key to it is the real distinction between existence and essence.
An analogy of proportion is therefore possible: " essence is related to existence as potency is related to act.
A common analogy explains that space itself is expanding, carrying galaxy | galaxies with it, like spots on an inflating balloon.
One helpful analogy is that by creating multiple VLANs, the number of broadcast domains increases, but the size of each broadcast domain size decreases.
Burnt-in timecode ( often abbreviated to BITC by analogy to VITC ) is a human-readable on-screen version of the timecode information for a piece of material superimposed on a video image.
The analogy in the case of rotating bucket is that the element of water surface will " slide " up or down the surface unless the normal to the surface aligns with the vector resultant formed by the vector addition F < sub > g </ sub > + F < sub > Cfgl </ sub >.
In some situations where 4NT is a quantitative invitation, especially where 4 is a jump, many partnerships use the Gerber convention by some analogy to the Blackwood family: 4 asks for the number of aces or key cards.
To find out what the precise law is that applies to a particular set of facts, one has to locate precedential decisions on the topic, and reason from those decisions by analogy.

analogy and extremely
Apart from the commonly cited example of water turning to steam with increased temperature, Gould and Eldredge noted another analogy in information theory, " with its jargon of equilibrium, steady state, and homeostasis maintained by negative feedback ," and " extremely rapid transitions that occur with positive feedback.
Any linear-chain heteropolymer can be said to have a " primary structure " by analogy to the usage of the term for proteins, but this usage is rare compared to the extremely common usage in reference to proteins.
A prominent computing scientist, E. W. Dijkstra, wrote in a paper that the coining of the term software engineer was not useful since it was an inappropriate analogy, " The existence of the mere term has been the base of a number of extremely shallow — and false — analogies, which just confuse the issue ... Computers are such exceptional gadgets that there is good reason to assume that most analogies with other disciplines are too shallow to be of any positive value, are even so shallow that they are only confusing.
Not just conceptual metaphors ( part of every language ) that express belief in analogy between generic concepts, but extremely specific metaphors involving proper names or use of concrete nouns to express generics or processes.

analogy and incomplete
The last of these accomplishments suggests that the analogy with the modern Muslim Brotherhoods is probably accurate, but incomplete.
In reality it is a little more complex, and the analogy is incomplete in that 1-bit sigma-delta converters are these days rather unusual, one reason being that a 1-bit signal cannot be dithered properly: most modern sigma-delta converters are multibit.

analogy and rapid
Some social movement scholars posit that with the rapid pace of globalization, the potential for the emergence of new type of social movement is latent — they make the analogy to national movements of the past to describe what has been termed a global citizens movement.

analogy and propagation
In this sense, the HJE fulfilled a long-held goal of theoretical physics ( dating at least to Johann Bernoulli in the 18th century ) of finding an analogy between the propagation of light and the motion of a particle.

analogy and sound
Studies are more likely to be considered sound if they use theoretical tools found in archaeology like analogy and homology and if they can demonstrate an understanding of accuracy and precision found in astronomy.
Pollution is the adding-of / added light itself, in analogy to added sound, carbon dioxide, etc.
Apparent exceptions are possible, due to analogy and other regularization processes, or another sound change, or an unrecognized conditioning factor.
The term " brightness " is also used in discussions of sound timbres, in a rough analogy with visual brightness.
In this figure, the amplitude and intensity are Gaussian function s. The phase function is quadratic, resulting in an instantaneous frequency sweep sometimes called a chirp, in analogy to the sound of some bird s.
The ratio of stress and speed should not be called " acoustic impedance " ( in analogy to the mechanical impedance ) because this term is already in use for the material property Z < sub > ac </ sub > = ρc with ρ the density and c the speed of sound ).
The color names for these different types of sounds are derived from a loose analogy between the spectrum of frequencies of sound wave present in the sound ( as shown in the blue diagrams ) and the equivalent spectrum of light wave frequencies.
The word stereophonic derives from the Greek " στερεός " ( stereos ), " firm, solid " + " φωνή " ( phōnē ), " sound, tone, voice " and it was coined in 1927 by Western Electric, by analogy with the word " stereoscopic ".
In the late 19th century, for example, the idea that light-waves have a physical medium called the luminiferous ether would have been best thought of as a neutral analogy with water and sound waves.
Eventually, due to a null result in the Michelson-Morley and Trouton-Noble experiments, as well as other similar experiments, this analogy came to be accepted as a negative analogy-we now accept that light has no physical medium, unlike sound and water waves.
* Analogy: if the premise of the inviolability of sound laws fails, analogy can be applied as an explanation if plausible.
Paul Kiparsky, in the Handbook of Phonology ( Goldsmith editor ), argues that under a proper definition of analogy as optimization, lexical diffusion is not a type of sound change.
McCullagh says that an argument from analogy, if sound, is either a " covert statistical syllogism " or better expressed as an argument to the best explanation.

analogy and wave
The de Broglie wave has a macroscopical analogy termed Faraday wave.
An entirely classical derivation and interpretation of Schrödinger's wave equation by analogy with Brownian motion was suggested by Princeton University professor Edward Nelson in 1966.
By ( upside-down ) analogy, this would be much like a surfer slipping out the end of the pipeline, where the wave no longer breaks.
Leonhard Euler once remarked that Le Sage's model was " infinitely better " than that of all other authors, and that all objections are balanced out in this model, but later he said the analogy to light had no weight for him, because he believed in the wave nature of light.
This work is an hydraulic analogy of shock wave cancellation in gas, allowing to consider the possibility of supersonic cruise in dense air without any sonic boom.
The term gained widespread use in the 1990s, as the result of a wave of the self-help movement that centered on addiction, forming an analogy between harmful social behaviors such as over-work and drug addiction, including addiction to alcohol.
He had been motivated to think of a wave theory of heat by analogy with the wave theory of light and some experiments by James Forbes and Macedonio Melloni on radiant heat.
This self-sustaining state was named by analogy with the soliton, which is a localized wave that maintains its integrity as it moves.
Another wave analogy is that pitch and TPI are inverses of each other in a similar way that period and frequency are inverses of each other.
The Faraday wave and its wavelength is analogy of the de Broglie wave with the de Broglie wavelength in quantum mechanics.
The analogy has been made to quantum processes through the core synaptic algorithm which has strong similarities to the QM wave equation.
In an analogy of plane wave theory and transmission line theory, the definition of reflection coefficient is a measure of the level of reflection normally at the boundary when a plane wave passes from one dielectric medium to another.
Eaton and Hall ( 1979 ) determined that the simplest mechanism for the creation of the distortion wave was " starspots ", which, in analogy to sunspots, are large, cool active regions on the photosphere.

1.288 seconds.