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human accelerated regions ( hars ), first described in august 2006, are a set of 49 segments of the human genome that are conserved throughout vertebrate evolution but are strikingly different in humans. they are named according to their degree of difference between humans and chimpanzees ( har1 showing the largest deg... | Human accelerated regions | wikipedia |
##r10 : fhit har11 : dmd har12 :? har20 : ppargc1a har21 : npas3 - association with psychiatric disorders har23 : mgc27016 har24 : skap2 har28 : adgrl4 ( latrophilin ) har31 : auts2 har33 : tbc1d22a har38 : itpr1 har40 : zbtb16 har43 : agbl4 har44 : fhit har45 : pola har47 : klhl14 ( kelch - like protein ) = = = human ... | Human accelerated regions | wikipedia |
the moving magnet and conductor problem is a famous thought experiment, originating in the 19th century, concerning the intersection of classical electromagnetism and special relativity. in it, the current in a conductor moving with constant velocity, v, with respect to a magnet is calculated in the frame of reference ... | Moving magnet and conductor problem | wikipedia |
in the two cases discussed – to electric currents of the same path and intensity as those produced by the electric forces in the former case. an overriding requirement on the descriptions in different frameworks is that they be consistent. consistency is an issue because newtonian mechanics predicts one transformation ... | Moving magnet and conductor problem | wikipedia |
requirement in physics is that all observers of the motion of a particle agree on the trajectory of the particle. for instance, if one observer notes that a particle collides with the center of a bullseye, then all observers must reach the same conclusion. this requirement places constraints on the nature of electromag... | Moving magnet and conductor problem | wikipedia |
zero. in general, the force exerted upon a particle of charge q in the conductor by the electric field and magnetic field is given by ( si units ) : f = q ( e + v × b ), { \ displaystyle \ mathbf { f } = q \ left ( \ mathbf { e } + \ mathbf { v } \ times \ mathbf { b } \ right ), } where q { \ displaystyle q } is the c... | Moving magnet and conductor problem | wikipedia |
of the lorentz force has no effect, and the force on the charge is given by f ′ = q e ′ = q v × b. { \ displaystyle \ mathbf { f }'= q \ mathbf { e }'= q \ mathbf { v } \ times \ mathbf { b }. } this demonstrates that the force is the same in both frames ( as would be expected ), and therefore any observable consequenc... | Moving magnet and conductor problem | wikipedia |
according to the expressions given below. = = transformation of fields as predicted by maxwell's equations = = in a frame moving at velocity v, the e - field in the moving frame when there is no e - field in the stationary magnet frame maxwell's equations transform as : e ′ = γ v × b { \ displaystyle \ mathbf { e }'= \... | Moving magnet and conductor problem | wikipedia |
conductor translate in the positive x - direction with velocity v. consequently, in the magnet frame where the conductor is moving, the lorentz force points in the negative y - direction, perpendicular to both the velocity, and the b - field. the force on a charge, here due only to the b - field, is f y = − q v b, { \ ... | Moving magnet and conductor problem | wikipedia |
transformations lead to a change in the y - component of a force : f y ′ = γ f y. { \ displaystyle { f _ { y } }'= \ gamma f _ { y }. } that is, within lorentz invariance, force is not the same in all frames of reference, unlike galilean invariance. but, from the earlier analysis based upon the lorentz force law : γ f ... | Moving magnet and conductor problem | wikipedia |
signal chain, or signal - processing chain is a term used in signal processing and mixed - signal system design to describe a series of signal - conditioning electronic components that receive input ( data acquired from sampling either real - time phenomena or from stored data ) sequentially, with the output of one por... | Signal chain | wikipedia |
megakaryocyte – erythroid progenitor cells ( meps ), among other blood cells, are generated as a result of hematopoiesis, which occurs in the bone marrow. hematopoietic stem cells ( hsc ) can differentiate into one of two progenitor cells : the common lymphoid progenitor and the common myeloid progenitor. meps derive f... | Megakaryocyte–erythroid progenitor cell | wikipedia |
sentence - final particles, including modal particles and interactional particles, are minimal lexemes ( words ) that occur at the end of a sentence and that do not carry referential meaning, but may relate to linguistic modality, register or other pragmatic effects. sentence - final particles are common in chinese, in... | Sentence-final particle | wikipedia |
) or ya ( ) : expresses excitement or emphasis. can be used in a question. the combination le a may be contracted as la ( ). ne ( ) : question particle that elicits elaboration on a topic previously discussed. can also be used to soften a question. ma ( / ) : forms a tag question. a major use of sentence - final partic... | Sentence-final particle | wikipedia |
, e. g. 司 を 食 ( sushi wo tabetai naa ), " i want to eat sushi ( so badly right now! ) ". ね ne : agreement. used when the speaker wants to verify or otherwise show agreement, reach consensus, or build solidarity with the listener. の no : emphatic / informal interrogative / indirect imperative. may be used to form inform... | Sentence-final particle | wikipedia |
go, no? " " don't you " in " you want to, don't you? " " are they " in " they're not hurt, are they? " " aren't they " in " they're here, aren't they? " " is it " in " the plate isn't broken, is it? " " isn't it " in " the plane is here, isn't it? " all but the first are tag questions. notice how when the main sentence... | Sentence-final particle | wikipedia |
¿ no es verdad? " ( you're ( informal ) from peru, isn't that right? ) note that in spanish, the question marks are placed around the tag question, and not around the entire sentence ( although english only uses the single final question mark, it is implied that the entire sentence, and not just the tag, is the questio... | Sentence-final particle | wikipedia |
in public services, automatic enrolment defines programmes where citizens are automatically included unless they opt out. = = examples = = there are various examples of automatic enrolment schemes in public services across the world. examples of the use of automatic enrolment schemes in the public sector include in the... | Automatic enrolment | wikipedia |
rates than when citizens are left to arrange their own pensions. libertarians argue against automatic enrolment as it impinges on an individual's freedom of choice. = = references = = = = external links = = https : / / web. archive. org / web / 20161118041846 / https : / / naeh. co. uk / national auto enrolment helplin... | Automatic enrolment | wikipedia |
in computing, terse rdf triple language ( turtle ) is a syntax and file format for expressing data in the resource description framework ( rdf ) data model. turtle syntax is similar to that of sparql, an rdf query language. it is a common data format for storing rdf data, along with n - triples, json - ld and rdf / xml... | Turtle (syntax) | wikipedia |
##script's n3. js. = = example = = the following example defines 3 prefixes ( " rdf ", " dc ", and " ex " ), and uses them in expressing a statement about the editorship of the rdf / xml document : ( turtle examples are also valid notation3 ). the example encodes an rdf graph made of four triples, which express these f... | Turtle (syntax) | wikipedia |
the ecosystem approach is a conceptual framework for resolving ecosystem issues. the idea is to protect and manage the environment through the use of scientific reasoning. another point of the ecosystem approach is preserving the earth and its inhabitants from potential harm or permanent damage to the planet itself. wi... | Ecosystem approach | wikipedia |
##measures in preventing the endangerment of any ecological environment. with the acknowledgment of the ecosystem approach, during the fifth meeting of the conference of the parties, a group consensus agreed on a concrete definition and elaboration for the ecosystem approach would be needed, and the parties would reque... | Ecosystem approach | wikipedia |
sustaining solution. one example, in particular, would be pertaining to fishery ( a commercial industry in capturing and selling of fishes ). in recent years, inland fisheries have quintupled from 2 million metric tons to 11 million metric tons in the span of 60 years from 1950 to 2010. through the use of the ecosystem... | Ecosystem approach | wikipedia |
human ecosystems are human - dominated ecosystems of the anthropocene era that are viewed as complex cybernetic systems by conceptual models that are increasingly used by ecological anthropologists and other scholars to examine the ecological aspects of human communities in a way that integrates multiple factors as eco... | Total human ecosystem | wikipedia |
in political science, a revolution ( latin : revolutio,'a turn around') is a rapid, fundamental transformation of a society's class, state, ethnic or religious structures. according to sociologist jack goldstone, all revolutions contain " a common set of elements at their core : ( a ) efforts to change the political re... | Evolution | wikipedia |
then to mean the revolving motion of celestial bodies. " revolution " in the sense of abrupt change in a social order was first recorded in the mid - 15th century. by 1688, the political meaning of the word was familiar enough that the replacement of james ii with william iii was termed the " glorious revolution ". = =... | Evolution | wikipedia |
but to overhaul an entire society, and ; slow and relentless revolutions that involve sweeping transformations of the entire society and may take several generations to bring about ( such as changes in religion ). one of the marxist typologies divides revolutions into : pre - capitalist early bourgeois bourgeois bourge... | Evolution | wikipedia |
that are not able to secure power after winning temporary victories or amassing large - scale mobilizations ) ; or violent vs. nonviolent revolutions. the term revolution has also been used to denote great changes outside the political sphere. such revolutions, often labeled social revolutions, are recognized as major ... | Evolution | wikipedia |
, demands, and subsystems ( political, cultural, etc. ). as in the psychological school, they differed in their definitions of what causes disequilibrium, but agreed that it is a state of severe disequilibrium that is responsible for revolutions. the third group, including writers such as charles tilly, samuel p. hunti... | Evolution | wikipedia |
generation came under criticism for being too limited in geographical scope, and for lacking a means of empirical verification. also, while second - generation theories may have been capable of explaining a specific revolution, they could not adequately explain why revolutions failed to occur in other societies experie... | Evolution | wikipedia |
. civil rights — had much in common with studies of revolution and could enrich the latter. thus, " a new literature on'contentious politics'has developed that attempts to combine insights from the literature on social movements and revolutions to better understand both phenomena. " the fourth generation increasingly t... | Evolution | wikipedia |
as revolutionary as its rhetoric would have us believe ". while the " formal rules " of laws and constitutions can be changed virtually overnight, the " informal constraints " such as institutional inertia and cultural inheritance do not change quickly and thereby slow down the societal transformation. according to nor... | Evolution | wikipedia |
2013 ). individual rights and the making of the international system. cambridge university press. doi : 10. 1017 / cbo9781139046527. isbn 978 - 0 - 521 - 85777 - 2. = = further reading = = beissinger, mark r. 2022. the revolutionary city : urbanization and the global transformation of rebellion. princeton university pr... | Evolution | wikipedia |
bayes linear statistics is a subjectivist statistical methodology and framework. traditional subjective bayesian analysis is based upon fully specified probability distributions, which are very difficult to specify at the necessary level of detail. bayes linear analysis attempts to solve this problem by developing theo... | Bayes linear statistics | wikipedia |
the partition d × b the analyst specifies subjective expectations for just a few quantities that they are interested in or feel knowledgeable about. then instead of conditioning an adjusted expectation is computed by a rule that is a generalization of bayes'rule that is based upon expectation. the use of the word linea... | Bayes linear statistics | wikipedia |
_ { 1 } & x _ { 2 } & y _ { 1 } & y _ { 2 } \ \ \ hline x _ { 1 } & 1 & u & \ gamma & \ gamma \ \ x _ { 2 } & u & 1 & \ gamma & \ gamma \ \ y _ { 1 } & \ gamma & \ gamma & 1 & v \ \ y _ { 2 } & \ gamma & \ gamma & v & 1 \ \ \ end { array } }. } the repetition in this matrix, has some interesting implications to be disc... | Bayes linear statistics | wikipedia |
k { \ displaystyle h _ { 0 }, \ dots, h _ { k } } to minimise from a proof provided in ( goldstein and wooff 2007 ) it can be shown that : e d ( x ) = e ( x ) + c o v ( x, d ) v a r ( d ) − 1 ( d − e ( d ) ). { \ displaystyle e _ { d } ( x ) = e ( x ) + \ mathrm { cov } ( x, d ) \ mathrm { var } ( d ) ^ { - 1 } ( d - e... | Bayes linear statistics | wikipedia |
of probability. de finetti, b. ( 1937 ) “ la prevision : ses lois logiques, ses sources subjectives, ” annales de l'institut henri poincare, - " foresight : its logical laws, its subjective sources, " ( translation of the 1937 article in french ) in h. e. kyburg and h. e. smokler ( eds ), studies in subjective probabil... | Bayes linear statistics | wikipedia |
reproductive value is a concept in demography and population genetics that represents the discounted number of future female children that will be born to a female of a specific age. ronald fisher first defined reproductive value in his 1930 book the genetical theory of natural selection where he proposed that future o... | Reproductive value (population genetics) | wikipedia |
= = see also = = population dynamics euler – lotka equation leslie matrix senescence = = notes = = fisher, r. a. 1930. the genetical theory of natural selection. oxford university press, oxford. keyfitz, n. and caswell, h. 2005. applied mathematical demography. springer, new york. 3rd edition. doi : 10. 1007 / b139042 ... | Reproductive value (population genetics) | wikipedia |
a sudden stop in capital flows is defined as a sudden slowdown in private capital inflows into emerging market economies, and a corresponding sharp reversal from large current account deficits into smaller deficits or small surpluses. sudden stops are usually followed by a sharp decrease in output, private spending and... | Sudden stop (economics) | wikipedia |
##ns the economic recession. a collapse in asset prices also contributes to a sharp slowdown in economic activity. the value of loan collaterals are severely reduced which further impacts the situation of the financial system and reduces credit, reflecting in lower consumption and investment. furthermore, lower asset p... | Sudden stop (economics) | wikipedia |
debt the higher the exposure to illiquidity problems. this models is particularly related to the situation in emerging markets, because of the larger role of banks compared to other financial institutions in these economies and because it is more difficult for them to get emergency funds from world markets during crisi... | Sudden stop (economics) | wikipedia |
and the size of capital account reversal. also, emerging economies are more exposed to suffer this type of crisis as well as current - account reversals. another topic of study is the impact of sudden stops on output. sudden stops can be accompanied by a currency crisis and / or a banking crisis. empirical studies show... | Sudden stop (economics) | wikipedia |
= policy measures = = regarding policy measures adopted during sudden stop episodes, the massive slowdown in capital inflows, usually presented as large capital outflows, can be counteracted by exchange rate devaluation, loss of international reserves and / or increases in real interest rates. the nominal exchange rate... | Sudden stop (economics) | wikipedia |
the sheepeater cliffs are a series of exposed cliffs made up of columnar basalt in yellowstone national park in the united states. the lava was deposited about 500, 000 years ago during one of the periodic basaltic floods in yellowstone caldera, and later exposed by the gardner river. the cliffs are noted as a textbook... | Sheepeater Cliff | wikipedia |
immunomagnetic separation ( ims ) is a laboratory tool that can efficiently isolate cells out of body fluid or cultured cells. it can also be used as a method of quantifying the pathogenicity of food, blood or feces. dna analysis have supported the combined use of both this technique and polymerase chain reaction ( pcr... | Immunomagnetic separation | wikipedia |
##ynal, inc., lake success, ny ). where as smaller beads ( < 100 nm ) are mostly used for macs system that was produced by miltenyi biotech ( miltenyi biotech ltd., bisley, surrey, uk ; miltenyi biotech inc., auburn, ca ). immunomagnetic separation is used in a variety of scientific fields including molecular biology, ... | Immunomagnetic separation | wikipedia |
worksoft, inc. is a software testing company founded in 1998 and headquartered in addison, texas. the company provides an automation platform for test automation, business process discovery, and documentation supporting enterprise applications, including packaged and web apps. in addition to its headquarters in addison... | Worksoft | wikipedia |
the prize for innovation in distributed computing ( also called sirocco award ) is an award presented annually at the conference international colloquium on structural information and communication complexity ( sirocco ) to a living individual ( or individuals ) who have made a major contribution to understanding " the... | Prize for Innovation in Distributed Computing | wikipedia |
hayandose is a cultural category used to express membership and belonging among zapotec migrants, described by cultural anthropologist lourdes gutierrez - najera. hayandose entails a process of creating ethnically - marked spaces among migrants in an effort to combat feelings of marginalization and displacement in a ho... | Hayandose | wikipedia |
be exclusive to yalalag, but that have now permeated american society, demonstrates the transnational character of yalaltecos indigeneity that makes possible the process of hayandose through the seizure and declaration of these ethnically - marked spaces. yalaltecos living in los angeles have invoked their cultural ide... | Hayandose | wikipedia |
can obtain, as opposed to just a single " center " being the place of origin. because migration causes displacement among emigrants who are forced to adapt to a new environment, culture, and way of living, bringing the culture and customs that they practiced in their places of origin to their new location helps to comb... | Hayandose | wikipedia |
the heat death paradox, also known as thermodynamic paradox, clausius'paradox, and kelvin's paradox, is a reductio ad absurdum argument that uses thermodynamics to show the impossibility of an infinitely old universe. it was formulated in february 1862 by lord kelvin and expanded upon by hermann von helmholtz and willi... | Heat death paradox | wikipedia |
should therefore be at the same temperature and there should either be no stars, or everything should be as hot as stars. the universe should thus achieve, or asymptotically tend to, thermodynamic equilibrium, which corresponds to a state where no thermodynamic free energy is left, and therefore no further work is poss... | Heat death paradox | wikipedia |
circadian rhythm sleep disorders ( crsd ), also known as circadian rhythm sleep – wake disorders ( crswd ), are a family of sleep disorders that affect the timing of sleep. crsds cause a persistent pattern of sleep / wake disturbances that arise either by dysfunction in one's biological clock system, or by misalignment... | Circadian rhythm sleep disorder | wikipedia |
humans, and allows for the internal physiological mechanisms underlying sleep and alertness to become synchronized to external environmental cues, like the light - dark cycle. the scn also sends signals to peripheral clocks in other organs, like the liver, to control processes such as glucose metabolism. although these... | Circadian rhythm sleep disorder | wikipedia |
earlier wake time. = = diagnosis = = the international classification of sleep disorders classifies circadian rhythm sleep disorder as a type of sleep dyssomnia. although studies suggest that 3 % of the adult population has a crsd, many people are often misdiagnosed with insomnia instead of a crsd. of adults diagnosed ... | Circadian rhythm sleep disorder | wikipedia |
patterns described in their sleep history. other additional ways to classify the nature of a patient's sleep and biological clock are the morningness - eveningness questionnaire ( meq ) and the munich chronotype questionnaire, both of which have fairly strong correlations with accurately reporting phase advanced or del... | Circadian rhythm sleep disorder | wikipedia |
662 ( s662g ). irregular sleep – wake rhythm disorder ( iswrd ) is characterized by a normal 24 h sleeping period. however, individuals with this disorder experience fragmented and highly disorganized sleep that can manifest in the form of waking frequently during the night and taking naps during the day, yet still mai... | Circadian rhythm sleep disorder | wikipedia |
to worsening of an ad patient's cognitive abilities, emotional state and quality of life. moreover, the abnormal behavioural symptoms of the disease negatively contribute to overwhelming patients'relatives and caregivers as well. however, the impact of sleep – wake disturbances on the subjective experience of a person ... | Circadian rhythm sleep disorder | wikipedia |
##g. dark therapy, for example, the use of blue - blocking goggles, is used to block blue and blue - green wavelength light from reaching the eye during evening hours so as not to hinder melatonin production. = = see also = = = = references = = = = external links = = circadian sleep disorders network an american academ... | Circadian rhythm sleep disorder | wikipedia |
in the field of computational neuroscience, the theory of metastability refers to the human brain's ability to integrate several functional parts and to produce neural oscillations in a cooperative and coordinated manner, providing the basis for conscious activity. metastability, a state in which signals ( such as osci... | Metastability in the brain | wikipedia |
between unstable and stable phase synchronization. this phase synchronization forms the basis of metastable behavior in neural networks. metastable behavior occurs at the high frequency domain known as 1 / f regime. this regime describes an environment in which a noisy signal ( also known as pink noise ) has been induc... | Metastability in the brain | wikipedia |
of in - phase and out - of - phase movements. in the mid - 1980s hkb model experiments, subjects were asked to wave one finger on each hand in two modes of direction : first, known as out of phase, both fingers moving in the same direction back and forth ( as windshield wipers might move ) ; and second, known as in - p... | Metastability in the brain | wikipedia |
the brain's metastable nature as a function of a coordinated dynamical system. fmri, large - scale electrode arrays, and meg expand upon the patterns seen in eeg by providing visual confirmation of coordinated dynamics. the meg, which provides an improvement over eeg in spatiotemporal characterization, allows researche... | Metastability in the brain | wikipedia |
theory of metastability involves a so - called dynamic core, which is a term to loosely describe the thalamocortical region believed to be the integration center of consciousness. the dynamic core hypothesis ( dch ) reflects the use and disuse of interconnected neuronal networks during stimulation of this region. a com... | Metastability in the brain | wikipedia |
by multiple parts of the brain simultaneously. both the dch and global neuronal workspace ( gnw ) models involve re - entrance, but the gnw model elaborates on re - entrant connectivity between distant parts of the brain and long - range signal flow. workspace neurons are similar anatomically but separated spatially fr... | Metastability in the brain | wikipedia |
and local segregative tendencies coexist in the brain. the operational architectonics is centered on the fact that in the metastable regime of brain functioning, the individual parts of the brain exhibit tendencies to function autonomously at the same time as they exhibit tendencies for coordinated activity. in accorda... | Metastability in the brain | wikipedia |
the term center or centre is used in various contexts in abstract algebra to denote the set of all those elements that commute with all other elements. the center of a group g consists of all those elements x in g such that xg = gx for all g in g. this is a normal subgroup of g. the similarly named notion for a semigro... | Center (algebra) | wikipedia |
the effects of the covid - 19 pandemic, a global pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 ( covid - 19 ) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 ( sars cov ‑ 2 ), have been broad, affecting general society, the global economy, culture, ecology, politics, and other areas. these aspects are discussed across... | Financial market impact of the COVID-19 pandemic | wikipedia |
- 19 pandemic on retail impact of the covid - 19 pandemic on tourism travel restrictions related to the covid - 19 pandemic = = impact on culture and entertainment = = impact of the covid - 19 pandemic on cinema list of films impacted by the covid - 19 pandemic impact of the covid - 19 pandemic on education 2020 uk gcs... | Financial market impact of the COVID-19 pandemic | wikipedia |
19 pandemic misinformation related to the covid - 19 pandemic covid - 19 misinformation by governments covid - 19 misinformation by china covid - 19 misinformation by the united states covid - 19 misinformation in canada covid - 19 misinformation in the philippines list of unproven methods against covid - 19 plandemic ... | Financial market impact of the COVID-19 pandemic | wikipedia |
impact of the covid - 19 pandemic in the united states impact of the covid - 19 pandemic on african - american communities impact of the covid - 19 pandemic on native american tribes and tribal communities social stigma associated with covid - 19 strikes during the covid - 19 pandemic workplace hazard controls for covi... | Financial market impact of the COVID-19 pandemic | wikipedia |
- 19 pandemic protests over responses to the covid - 19 pandemic protests over covid - 19 policies in italy protests over covid - 19 policies in germany covid - 19 anti - lockdown protests in new zealand 2020 – 2021 serbian protests covid - 19 anti - lockdown protests in the united kingdom covid - 19 anti - lockdown pr... | Financial market impact of the COVID-19 pandemic | wikipedia |
eating your own dog food or " dogfooding " is the practice of using one's own products or services. this can be a way for an organization to test its products in real - world usage using product management techniques. hence dogfooding can act as quality control, and eventually a kind of testimonial advertising. once in... | Eating your own dog food | wikipedia |
developers or teams work on the same product. the risks of public dogfooding, specifically that a company may have difficulties using its own products, may reduce the frequency of publicized dogfooding. = = examples = = in february 1980, apple computer president michael scott wrote a memo announcing effective immediate... | Eating your own dog food | wikipedia |
down - time, although dogfooding is rarely so dramatic. a second email storm in 2006 was handled perfectly by the system. in 1999, hewlett - packard staff referred to a project using hp's own products as " project alpo " ( referring to a brand of dog food ). around the same time, mozilla also practised dogfooding under... | Eating your own dog food | wikipedia |
syndrome, i. e. only using internal products. in 1989, donald knuth published a paper recounting lessons from the development of his tex typesetting software, in which the benefits of the approach were mentioned : thus, i came to the conclusion that the designer of a new system must not only be the implementor and the ... | Eating your own dog food | wikipedia |
planetary science ( or more rarely, planetology ) is the scientific study of planets ( including earth ), celestial bodies ( such as moons, asteroids, comets ) and planetary systems ( in particular those of the solar system ) and the processes of their formation. it studies objects ranging in size from micrometeoroids ... | Planetary geodesy | wikipedia |
plants and all water. in more modern times, planetary science began in astronomy, from studies of the unresolved planets. in this sense, the original planetary astronomer would be galileo, who discovered the four largest moons of jupiter, the mountains on the moon, and first observed the rings of saturn, all objects of... | Planetary geodesy | wikipedia |
own branch. = = = planetary geology = = = in planetary science, the term geology is used in its broadest sense, to mean the study of the surface and interior parts of planets and moons, from their core to their magnetosphere. the best - known research topics of planetary geology deal with the planetary bodies in the ne... | Planetary geodesy | wikipedia |
generating hypotheses on the formation and evolution of objects in the solar system is the lack of samples that can be analyzed in the laboratory, where a large suite of tools are available, and the full body of knowledge derived from terrestrial geology can be brought to bear. direct samples from the moon, asteroids a... | Planetary geodesy | wikipedia |
the visible light region but in other areas of the electromagnetic spectrum. the planets can be characterized by their force fields : gravity and their magnetic fields, which are studied through geophysics and space physics. measuring the changes in acceleration experienced by spacecraft as they orbit has allowed fine ... | Planetary geodesy | wikipedia |
to gravity, that the rock there would become plastic, and the mountain would slump back to a height of roughly 10 km ( 6 mi ) in a geologically insignificant time. some or all of these geologic principles can be applied to other planets besides earth. for instance on mars, whose surface gravity is much less, the larges... | Planetary geodesy | wikipedia |
terrestrial planets, to give only a few examples. the main comparison that can be made is to features on the earth, as it is much more accessible and allows a much greater range of measurements to be made. earth analog studies are particularly common in planetary geology, geomorphology, and also in atmospheric science.... | Planetary geodesy | wikipedia |
( isa ) italian space agency japan aerospace exploration agency ( jaxa ) nasa ( national aeronautics and space administration, united states of america ) jpl gsfc ames national space organization ( taiwan ). russian federal space agency uk space agency ( uksa ). = = = major conferences = = = lunar and planetary science... | Planetary geodesy | wikipedia |
( 2015 ) the geology of planetary landforms. in : hargitai h ( ed ) encyclopedia of planetary landforms. springer. rossi, a. p., van gasselt s ( eds ) ( 2018 ) planetary geology. springer = = external links = = planetary science research discoveries ( articles ) the planetary society ( world's largest space - interest ... | Planetary geodesy | wikipedia |
in mathematics, the relative interior of a set is a refinement of the concept of the interior, which is often more useful when dealing with low - dimensional sets placed in higher - dimensional spaces. formally, the relative interior of a set s { \ displaystyle s } ( denoted relint ( s ) { \ displaystyle \ operatorname... | Relative interior | wikipedia |
} = { x ∈ c : for all y = x ∈ c, there exists some z ∈ c such that x ∈ ( y, z ) }. { \ displaystyle { \ begin { aligned } \ operatorname { relint } ( c ) & : = \ { x \ in c : { \ text { for all } } y \ in c, { \ text { there exists some } } \ lambda > 1 { \ text { such that } } \ lambda x + ( 1 - \ lambda ) y \ in c \ ... | Relative interior | wikipedia |
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