g ga gb gc gd ge gf gg gh gi gj gk gl gm gn go gp gr gs gt gu gw gy gz

Перевод: gravitation speek gravitation


[существительное]
тяготение; притяжение; гравитация ; сила тяжести


Тезаурус:

  1. It is difficult to see how the question, "How falsifiable is Newton's law of gravitation?" could be answered.
  2. The balance of forces is between implosive gravitation and explosive nuclear reaction.
  3. It consists of Newton's laws of motion plus his law of gravitation, the latter asserting that all pairs of bodies in the universe attract each other with a force that varies inversely as the square of their separation.
  4. They may occur to the discoverer in a flash of inspiration, as in the mythical story of Newton's discovery of the law of gravitation being triggered by his seeing an apple fall from a tree.
  5. God was, for Darwin then, still the traditional good and wise creator, but one never working in so many separate acts of miraculous interference, always through the natural consequences of a few initial enactments of general causal laws: as with planetary orbits and the law of gravitation, so, Darwin insisted, with species origins and the laws of generation.
  6. But here is the first full account of Stockhausen's childhood in the war - his mother, a depressive, was a victim of the Nazis'" euthanasia policy" - and of his gravitation towards Darmstadt as the centre of world music in the immediate post-war years.
  7. This recent gravitation towards the Continent has been encouraged by the relatively short travelling time between the capital and Europe's sun-spots.
  8. Based on popular lectures at Boston Science Museum, 13 Massachusetts astronomers present their personal slants on research problems ranging from heating of the solar corona to Einsteinian gravitation, emphasising the complex interplay between theory and observation and the problems and frustrations of research, rather than just its outcome.
  9. The appearance of a specific theory of gravitation in the resolution of the problem, even if it were Einstein's own, seemed a trifle odd.
  10. There was now a universal law of gravitation.
  11. In the sciences it is a commonplace, not at first sight disturbing, that physics began by simulating Euclid's demonstrations in geometry, and that the inverse square law of gravitation became the model for another in electro-magnetism, that "waves" of sound or light are suggested by waves on water, and the genetic "code" by language.
  12. All of this seemed to be well understood until early this century, because it was explained in terms of Newton's theory of gravitation.
  13. This effect can vitiate scientific observation, as when seventeenth century experimenters, familiar with the concepts of post-Galilean mechanics but not of electrostatic attraction and repulsion, regularly reported observing chaff falling as though by gravitation, or mechanically rebounding from the electrified bodies which attracted them.

LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов

Copyright © Perevod-Translate.ru