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Примеры на инфинитив после глагольной формы/ прилагательного ⇐ ПредыдущаяСтр 2 из 2
1. A BEC is a group of a few million atoms that merge to make a single matter-wave about a millimetre or so across. NB 2. A four-poster bed thought to have been used by Lord Byron fetched Pounds 14,375, double the estimate, at a Bonhams auction in London. 3. A full-time student on a master’s programme is normally expected to complete the programme in 1 year and a part-time student on a master’s programme is normally expected to complete the programme in 2 years. 4. A graduate diploma is considered to be a postgraduate qualification as it is only available to people who already have a bachelor degree. However, the contents of the course are undergraduate in nature. Graduate diplomas are popular in professional subjects such as Law, Accountancy, and Psychology and act as conversion courses for people who wish to change careers and gain professional accreditation. 5. A large dispersion in the TF distances to the spiral galaxies in the direction of the Virgo cluster, which had cast doubt on the viability of this technique, is now known to arise from the true depth of this cluster in space. 6. A major goal is to make all resources accessible to any process in the system, without regard to the relative location of the resource user. 7. A popular approximation is to consider that the first observed particles move approximately parallel to the mean magnetic field. 8. A recent study of Einstein's preserved brain has discovered that the inferior parietal [теменной] region--the part thought to be related to mathematical reasoning--was 15% wider than normal. 9. A research fellow is a member of an academic institution whose job is to do research. 10. A value of 65 km s−1 Mpc−1, for example, would imply, in principle, that a galaxy at a distance of 1 megaparsec should be receding at a speed of 65 km s−1, a galaxy at a distance of 1000 megaparsecs at 65 000 km s−1, and so on. 11. Absolute zero is a theoretical temperature that is thought to be the lowest possible temperature. 12. According to the theory of a closed universe, the expansion of the universe should slow down as it ages, and older supernovas should be receding more rapidly than the younger supernovas. 13. After one millionth of a second the light will have spread out to form a sphere with a radius of 300 meters. 14. Again, the fact that space is curved means that light no longer appears to travel in straight lines in space. 15. All the HMG (high-mobility-group)proteins are considered to function as architectural elements that modify the structure of DNA and chromatin to generate a conformation that facilitates and enhances various DNA-dependent activities. 16. All we want is to be cremated and our ashes scattered in this garden. 17. Although a string sounds like a fairly simple physical object, it turns out to be hard to find a complete theory consistent with all the requirements of relativity and quantum theory. 18. Although HERA (Hadron Electron Ring Accelerator) is expected to close in two years' time, much of its integrated luminosity is still in the future. 19. Although this gap is closing, current techniques appear to give dichotomous results, even allowing for their internal error estimates. 20. An animal is considered to have a good pedigree when all its known ancestors are of the same type. 21. Anaximander is reported to have made the first Greek map. 22. Around 6.4 billion years from now, the Sun's core will become hot enough to cause hydrogen fusion to occur in its less dense upper layers. 23. As each subdetector was assembled, the teams re-tested it to ensure that it continued to achieve the required performance. This incorporated a quarter of the complete safety, control, power, data-acquisition and computing systems for the Tracker – destined eventually for the CMS caverns – including electrical and optical cables, which were to be re-used to keep down costs. 24. As two string loops fuse to form one, they go through a transitional shape-like a figure of eight. 25. As with the original masterclasses, the basic idea of the pan-European event was to let the students work as much as possible like real scientists in an authentic environment at a particle-physics institute, not only to feel the excitement of dealing with real data, but also to experience the difficulties of validating the scientific results. 26. At first glance, the multiverse seems to lie outside of science because it cannot be observed. 27. At first television as a medium was considered to be little different from film. 28. Atomic physics has proved to be a spectacularly successful application of quantum mechanics, which is one of the cornerstones of modern physics. 29. Atoms combine to form molecules, whose structure is studied by chemistry and chemical physics. 30. Bats were sometimes observed to fly in circles about 1 m above the grass. 31. Because people tended to become listless during the dog days [hottest period of the year (reckoned in antiquity from the heliacal rising of Sirius, the Dog Star)], Sirius was held to have a detrimental effect on human activities. 32. Both FAFNER and I-WAY attempted to produce metacomputing environments by integrating resources from opposite ends of the computing spectrum. 33. Both these ideas have proved to be right. 34. But Newton’s theory had got rid of the idea of absolute rest, so if light was supposed to travel at a fixed speed, one would have to say what that fixed speed was to be measured relative to. 35. But the only way to get a low interest rate, no annual fee, plus the unsurpassed benefits only Citibank can offer is to accept the Citibank Visa* card reserved in your name. 36. By August 2005 the solenoid was ready to be inserted into the cryostat that keeps it at its operating temperature of 4.5 K. 37. By believing themselves to be invalids such women are able to establish their ascendancy over their families, compelling others to wait on them. The remedy is to explain the psychology of it to them. 38. By simulating neurons to fire action potentials in different patterns and then measuring the amount of mRNA from genes known to be important in forming neural circuits or in adapting to the enivoriment, we found our prediction to be true. 39. By the fall, thousands of East Germans had followed this route, while thousands of others sought asylum in the West German embassies in Prague and Warsaw, demanding that they be allowed to emigrate to the Federal Republic. 40. Canals (Martian): elusive linear features on Mars claimed to exist by some observers from the late nineteenth century until well into the twentieth. 41. Chemical reactions with the surface [of Venus] should be removing sulfur quickly from the atmosphere, maybe through the formation of anhydrite (CaSO4). 42. China must have been receiving western traditions even before 2000 B.C. 43. Clearly strings are much too tiny to be observed as strings. 44. Clever arrangements of gears and wheels were devised that could be made to turn by weights attached to them. As the weights were pulled downward by the force of gravity, the wheels were forced to turn in a slow, regular manner. 45. Contact is not likely to be always amicable. 46. Despite the limitations of its extraordinary mounting (it swung on ropes and chains between two massive stone walls on which the observing platform was mounted, to access the eyepiece), and its cylindrical tubular mounting (which trapped heat and, potentially, degraded seeing), the Rosse telescope discovered the spiral forms of the objects we now know to be external galaxies. [внешняя галактика] The telescope was restored to working order (although not with its original mirror) in 1998. 47. Distant supernovae of type I, believed to be fueled by the collapse of an accreting white dwarf to a neutron star, are an excellent probe of the expansion rate of the universe because their absolute brightness is believed to be nearly the same for each explosion, with empirical corrections available to improve the uniformity of the sample even more. 48. Dolby has announced a program on behalf of several MPEG-4 AAC licensors, and a more comprehensive MPEG-4 Audio licensing program is expected to be announced soon. 49. Each clan performs ceremonies supposed to ensure multiplication of the animals and plants. 50. Each module was assembled from one or two microstrip sensors, which had to be connected to the APV25 readout chip. The module chips also had to be bonded to their low-mass carrier. 51. Each society may be expected to evolve distinctive processes and devices. 52. Earth (1 AU) is the largest and densest of the inner planets, the only one known to have current geological activity, and the only planet known to have life. 53. Einstein wondered if BEC's were too strange to be real even though he himself had thought of them. 54. El Niño and the Southern Oscillation appear to be the oceanic and atmospheric components of a single large-scale, coupled interaction—the El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO). The ENSO phenomenon appears to influence mid-latitude weather conditions by modulating the position and intensity of the polar-front jet stream. 55. Electricity and magnetism are now known to be components of the unified field of electromagnetism. 56. Even when working with values that he knew to be obsolete, Gregory placed Sirius at 83 190 AU; the true distance would be much greater, in fact about 106 AU according to Newton when drafting The System of the World around 1685. But this work appeared only in 1728, after Newton’s death, and until then his estimate was known only to his intimates. 57. For this the students had to identify the final states of quark-jets, electron pairs, muon pairs and the notoriously difficult tau pairs from the tracks and signals in various components of LEP (CERN's Large Electron-Positron Collider) detectors. 58. From the start, the idea was to assemble and test the CMS magnet – and the whole detector structure – on the surface prior to lowering it 90 m below ground to its final position. 59. Gamma rays from AGNs [active galactic nuclei] are thought to originate in their relativistic plasma jets, which are powered by accretion of host-galaxy material by a supermassive black hole. 60. Hansen had aimed to advance research in nuclear physics, but his invention was to have an enormous impact on medicine. 61. He [Riccardo Giacconi Риккардо ДЖАККОНИ] also detected sources of x-rays that most astronomers now consider to contain black holes. 62. He is believed to have used it when he joined Greek rebels in their 1823 battle for independence. 63. He reckoned that the limits of the Galactic system, which he took to be where the star density sank to 1/100th of the density in the solar neighbourhood, were found at roughly 1700 pc at right-angles to the plane and 8500 pc along the Galactic plane. 64. He will find out in three weeks if he is to be jailed. NB 65. Here is an opportunity for students to examine their concepts of what it is to be an environmentalist, and to examine their own behavior in this context. NB 66. Historians suggest that the desert rains and vegetation encountered by the Spaniards may have facilitated their conquest of the Inca empire. 67. How this is to be achieved is altogether a different matter. 68. However, as the earth orbits around the sun, different stars appear to pass behind the sun and have their light deflected. 69. However, for small scattering angles, the interference of the electromagnetic and strong interactions is expected to provide a significant analysing power for elastic proton-proton (and proton-nucleus) scattering. 70. I was then directed to sign the guest book with the (typically Hungarian) air of formality one would expect to find reserved for a visiting head of state. 71. If BSS [blue straggler stars] are produced by stellar mergers (including off-center collisions), they should be rapidly rotating, at least initially. 72. If solar energy is to become a practical alternative to fossil fuels, we must have efficient ways to convert photons into electricity, fuel, and heat. 73. If the magnification is to remain constant over a wide range of energies, quite complicated electrostatic lens systems are required, containing three, four, or even more lens elements. 74. If these are shown to be important effects then, like beam "hosing" and beam "head erosion" they will represent a design constraint on a plasma accelerator. 75. If this is indeed true, quantitative changes in these proteins could be expected to have pleiotropic effects and to affect many cellular activities. 76. In 1845 the third Earl of Rosse [Уильям Парсонс, лорд Росс] built what was then much the most powerful telescope in the world—the Birr Castle 72 in reflector—and used it to discover the spiral forms of the objects we now know to be galaxies. 77. In China Lao-tse and Confucius are supposed then to have taught a rational morality founding Taoism and Confucianism in the 6th century. 78. In general, strings moving in their lowest quantum states are to be identified with ordinary particles. 79. In his paper on the equivalence of matter and energy (previously considered to be distinct concepts), Einstein deduced from his equations of special relativity what would later become the most famous expression in all of science: E = mc2, suggesting that tiny amounts of mass could be converted into huge amounts of energy. 80. In order to simplify the distance calculation, we assume that distances between chips are negligible. 81. In popular string theories, this length is taken to be of order of magnitude of the Planck length (10-35 metre) or a little longer. 82. In recent years the even smaller deviations of the orbits of the other planets from the Newtonian predictions have been measured by radar and found to agree with the predictions of general relativity. 83. In rigid-body dynamics, the extension of bodies and their mass distributions are considered as well, but they are imagined to be incapable of deformation. 84. In some cases, one part of a complex structure may turn out to be useful; in others the combination of optical effects might be what's wanted. 85. In the past 100 years, physics is thought to have greatly shaped people's view of the world, and created the opportunity for technological development. 86. In the whole continent of Australia the aboriginal population is believed never to have exceeded 200,000 - a density of only .3 per square mile. 87. Increasingly, reporters were expected to have more formal education than in the early days of newspapers, and many began to specialize in covering specific topics such as health and business. 88. Indeed, here the problems are even more urgent, and the answer, again, appears to be atomic-layer deposition, which was adopted for the production of the latest generation of DRAM chips. 89. Interconnection technologies – especially fine-pitch bump bonding, which were not yet mature for applications in particle physics – had to be studied and, in some cases, developed in CMS labs to allow construction of the detector. 90. It appears that only young brown dwarfs—or those relatively few likely to have masses just below the stellar mass limit—are observed in the L dwarf temperature range and are readily detectable by 2MASS and DENIS. 91. It happens that no comet calculated to have a period of over 200 years has yet been observed to return since its discovery. The first to do so will be Comet Peters (C/1857 O1), expected to return in 2092. 92. It is now well known that dust disks are common around main-sequence stars, the most famous of which is the dust disk surrounding β Pic, suspected to be a young planetary system. 93. It would indeed be a tragedy if the history of the human race proved to be nothing more than the story of an ape playing with a box of matches on a petrol dump.[David Ormsby Gore] 94. Kirchhoff's law, not federal law, governs power flow, and so the industry had to quickly come up with a method to adjudicate contracts between buyers and sellers of electricity. 95. Later he was to become famous as a pacifist. 96. Luxury tax is excise levy on goods or services considered to be luxuries rather than necessities. 97. Man-like creatures appeared some four to five thousand years ago; they appeared to live in social groups. 98. Mars has two tiny natural satellites (Deimos and Phobos) thought to be captured asteroids. 99. Massive neutrinos and supersymmetric particles both provide possible explanations for the nonluminous, or “dark,” matter that is believed to constitute 90 percent or more of the mass of the universe. This dark matter must exist if the motions of stars and galaxies are to be understood, but it has not been observed through radiation of any kind. 100. Mechanics is generally taken to mean the study of the motion of objects (or their lack of motion) under the action of given forces. 101. Middleware [межплатформ[ен]ное ПО, связующее ПО] is generally considered to be the layer of software sandwiched between the operating system and applications, providing a variety of services required by an application to function correctly. 102. Mortality rates of 50 percent or more are reported to occur in the period of a few months between hatching and independence of the young. 103. Most giant galaxies, such as our Milky Way, are thought to be surrounded by haloes of invisible, or dark, matter that outweigh the visible galaxy. 104. Most precious stones appear to come from the houses ascribed to "rich merchants". 105. Most reports of `virus-attacks" turn out to be nothing to do with viruses at all. 106. MPs say it is crucial that a system is found to compensate for inflation... 107. Much of what is now the North Sea must have been dry land, and men could have followed the equivalent of the Thames till it joined an early Rhine. . 108. Neutrino oscillation is an attractive explanation for the mystery of the missing solar neutrinos—the fact that experiments on Earth detect only one-third to two-thirds the number of electron-neutrinos expected to arrive from the Sun, where they are emitted by the nuclear reactions that convert hydrogen to helium in the solar core. 109. NLO (next-to-leading-order) corrections were shown to improve the description of charmonium production in two-photon collisions. 110. No existing launch vehicle could have sent the 6000-kg craft directly to Saturn. The mission designers found that a technique called "gravity assist" was the answer. 111. Office workers have been found to make more mistakes when distracted by traffic noise. 112. Officially, the guard was to protect us. In fact, they were there to report on our movements. 113. One has to concentrate on particular aspects, and to apply special techniques in order to extract the most interesting physical information in a form that can be visualized. 114. One in seven children suffers from asthma, thought to be exacerbated by traffic fumes. 115. One of the successes of string theory is to create a complete and consistent model of a black hole. I say "complete and consistent" because quantum theory is included and Hawking radiation (Section 13.4) accounted for. 116. One perceptive student, commenting on certain events at the time, said to me: “At F- - [a progressive school] the teachers die young; at J- - [a nonprogressive one] the students hang themselves: that seems to be the difference between the old-fashioned and progressive Education.” With three committees to attend each week, a teacher may properly be said to be going around in vicious circles. 117. One way out of this constraint is that at the large distances typical for lensing star events, galaxies are often observed to have considerably larger star formation rates than in their nearby older counterparts. 118. Other ports and airports in Britain are expected to join the scheme, and the Government is to change the law to allow pilot schemes in Jersey and Guernsey. 119. Our mission is to seek out the enemy and destroy them. 120. Over the years, he proved to be right. 121. Over-feeding in the first six months has been found to be linked with adult obesity (Crisp et al., 1970). 122. Parliament's job is to rubber-stamp his decisions... 123. Passive smoking involves breathing in the smoke from other people's cigarettes because you happen to be near them. 124. People have forgotten how to play--and how much fun it is to play. 125. Physicists already had recognized that the propagation of light can be thought to consist of discrete packets of energy traveling through space. 126. planets are believed to have formed by accretion: the planets began as dust grains in orbit around the central protostar; then gathered by direct contact into clumps between one and ten metres in diameter; then gradually increased by further collisions at roughly 15 cm per year over the course of the next few million years. 127. Protective measures are necessary if the city's monuments are to be preserved. 128. Quarks are said to come in three colours—red, blue, and green. 129. Radio observations also led to the discovery of pulsars, thought to be rapidly spinning neutron stars. Based on these measurements, Roemer estimated in 1675 the speed of light to be approximately 2x108 m//s. 130. Researchers hold that water must have been able to exist in its liquid state during the early evolution of the atmosphere since the oceans appear to have been present for at least 3,000,000,000 years. 131. Scanning tunneling potentiometry appears to have become an interesting technique to study the potential distribution on an atomic scale of current-carrying microstructures. 132. Scientific revolutions as far-reaching in their consequences as the plate tectonics revolution cannot be expected to be easily, or ever completely, accepted. 133. Shapely then noted that a few globular clusters also had long-period variables which he took to be of the same type as the field Cepheids which he and Hertzsprung had just calibrated. NB 134. She was breathalysed and found to be over the limit. 135. Short-period comets are believed to originate in the Kuiper belt, while long-period comets, such as Hale-Bopp, are believed to originate in the Oort cloud. 136. Similarly, the Framework Convention on Climate Change, or Global Warming Convention, adopted by 178 countries meeting in Rio de Janeiro at the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (popularly known as the “Earth Summit”), did not set binding targets for reducing the emission of the “greenhouse” gasses thought to cause global warming. 137. Since most quasars have switched off, dim or dead engines—starving BHs [black holes]—should be hiding in many nearby galaxies. 138. Six of 24 species of New Guinea birds thought to require urgent conservationaction are birds of paradise. 139. So the universe doesseem to be roughly the same in every direction. 140. Some of the fertility and other rituals are often found to have been monopolized by "secret societies". 141. Some of these fixed stars doappear to change very slightly their positions relative to each other as earth orbits around the sun: they are not really fixed at all! 142. Sometime around 1900, before quantum mechanics and special relativity, the pioneer of thermo-dynamics and the creator of the absolute-temperature scale [Lord Kelvin] reportedly declared, "There is nothing new to be discovered in physics now." NB 143. Soon it was realized that these electrons must be coming from within the atoms themselves, and in 1911 the New Zealand physicist Ernest Rutherford finally showed that the atoms of matter do have internal structure. 144. Standard stellar models predict that 1M_ stars which are now PNe should be expelling large amounts of 3He. 145. Stars following this pattern are saidto be on the main sequence; the Sun lies right in the middle of it. 146. Students are expected to acquaint themselves with the attendance and submission requirements for lectures, seminars, tutorials, practicals, laboratory work, language classes, performances, fieldwork and examinations as well as with dissertation supervisions for their programme of study. 147. Students will normally initially hold the status of Probationer Research Student and will be expected to apply to transfer to MSc status during the first year of their research. 148. Studies of T Tauri stars, young, pre-fusing solar mass stars believed to be similar to the Sun at this point in its evolution, show that they are often accompanied by discs of pre-planetary matter. 149. Such a water-clock had to be made quite complicated in order to work reasonably well, but this was managed. 150. supermodels are meant to induce despair, not lust. 151. ‘Terminator 2’ finally made $200 million, which was considered to be the break-even point for the picture. 152. The aim is to share educational resources and information. 153. The aim of this Educational Centre is to share educational resources and information. 154. The analysing power was observed to fall with energy, and the effectiveness of this method is exhausted by around 30 GeV. 155. The basic idea of the pan-European event was to let the students work as much as possible like real scientists in an authentic environment at a particle-physics institute, not only to feel the excitement of dealing with real data, but also to experience the difficulties of validating the scientific results. 156. The boats depicted are believed to be foreign to the Nile valley. 157. The British are supposed to be cold, reserved, rather haughty people. 158. The Bronze Age citizens of the Indus valley could have - and, indeed, must have - developed exact science. 159. The club will severely reprimand any individual or individuals found to be in breach of club discipline. 160. The composition of the varnish is therefore unlikely to be the long-lost secret, although too much varnish would certainly increase the damping and therefore sully the tone. 161. The consensus amongst the world's scientists is that the world is likely to warm up over the next few decades... 162. The consistent theories had two important features: supersymmetry had to be built in, and higher dimensions were needed. 163. The dual three-year contract is believed to be the first of its kind. 164. The Earth is thought to be around 4,600 million years old, an almost inconceivable time-span. 165. The efficiency of the spin-flip transitions is found to be above 99%. 166. The evolution of the computer is believed to have been started by Charles Babbage, who invented a semi-automatic mechanical calculator in 1842. 167. The FAM fluorescence signal was assumed to depend linearly on the fraction of opening strands straightened by hybridization to the complementary section of H. 168. The fires are likely to permanently deforest the land. 169. The first sight of a person riding a horse must have struck terror into the hearts of people unaccustomed to such a sight. 170. The first such application is expected to be large-area visual displays, called active-matrix displays. 171. The first tools must have been natural objects only slightly modified to serve human needs. Sinanthropus may have been a cannibal. 172. The fish, thought to be a pacu, a vegetarian cousin of the piranha, is so big that it cannot turn round. 173. The four basic forces of nature, in order of increasing strength, are thought to be: (1) the gravitational force between particles with mass; (2) the electromagnetic force between particles with charge or magnetism or both; (3) the colour force between quarks; and (4) the weak nuclear interaction. 174. The four outer planets, or gas giants (sometimes referred to as Jovian planets), collectively make up 99 percent of the mass known to orbit the Sun. 175. The goal of this integration technology is to produce inexpensive, high performance mixed material integrated systems. 176. The high-energy protons in the inner Van Allen belt are thought tooriginate from the decay of neutrons. 177. The hypothetical Oort cloud is a great mass of up to a trillion icy objects that is believed to be the source for all long-period comets and to surround the Solar System at around 50 AU. It is believed to be composed of comets which were ejected from the inner Solar System by gravitational interactions with the outer planets. 178. The idea of multiple universes is more than a fantastic invention. It appears naturally within several theories, and deserves to be taken seriously. 179. The inflation in the early stages of the universe, which the no boundary proposal predicts, means that the universe must be expanding at very close to the critical rate at which it would just avoid recollapse, and so will not recollapse for a very long time. (Stephen Hawking) 180. The initial life forms that evolved in this environment must have been anaerobic (i.e., capable of surviving in the absence of oxygen) and had to have been able to resist the biologically destructive short ultraviolet radiation that was not absorbed by a layer of ozone (O3) as it is today. 181. The lack of experimental guidance has made the issue extremely hard to pin down. 182. The main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter is thought to be remnants from the Solar System's formation that failed to coalesce because of the gravitational interference of Jupiter. 183. The measurements had to be incredibly accurate. 184. The meeting should have finished by now 185. The Neanderthalers must have hunted together as organized packs. 186. The nearest star, called Proxima Centauri, is found to be about four light-years away, or about twenty-three million million miles. 187. The numerical rule governing refraction was discovered by Snell, who must have collected experimental data something like what is shown on this graph and then attempted by trial and error to find the right equation. 188. The oft-sung King Arthur, the legendary ruler of the Britons, who struggled against the incoming Saxons, is said to have heldcourt in Tintagel Castle in Cornwall. 189. The only solution found to circumvent this difficulty is to send the mission to 5 AU from the Sun. 190. The outcome of the research is embodied in a thesis written by the candidate, and the doctorate is awarded if the thesis is judged to be of an appropriate standard and the research makes a definite contribution to knowledge. 191. The point at which the solar wind meets the interstellar medium, which is the "solar" wind from other stars, is called the heliopause. It is a boundary theorized to be roughly circular or teardrop-shaped, marking the edge of the Sun's influence perhaps 100 AU from the Sun. 192. The problem turned out to be metal fatigue in the fuselage. 193. The procedure is to first lay down an insulating layer of glass on which a pattern of lines is printed and etched. 194. The process IBM developed, dubbed SIMOX, short for separation by implantation of oxygen, was to bombard the silicon with oxygen atoms (or rather, oxygen ions, which have electrical charge and can thus be readily accelerated to high speeds). 195. The second new method uses the shape of the luminosity function for the planetary nebulae in a galaxy (PLNF), which is found to display a sharp upper cutoff in luminosity. 196. The shock wave from these supernovae may have triggered the formation of the Sun by creating regions of overdensity in the surrounding nebula. 197. The Solar System is believed to have formed according to the nebular hypothesis, which holds that it emerged from the gravitational collapse of a giant molecular cloud 4.6 billion years ago. 198. The solution is to use something other than the usual silicon dioxide to insulate the gate. 199. The speed isn’t supposed to be zero. 200. The step from a point to a string turns out to be manageable by rather elegant mathematics. Objects of higher dimension seem to be less tractable. 201. The Sun's gravitational field is estimated to dominate the gravitational forces of surrounding stars out to about two light years (125,000 AU). 202. The Swiss physician and alchemist Philippus Aureolus, also known as Paracelsus (1493-1541) and said to be the father of the modern science of toxicology, wrote “All things are poison, and nothing is without poison, the dose alone makes a thing not a poison.” 203. The symmetry properties of the theory can be shown to have as mathematical consequences basic principles known as conservation laws. 204. The UK National Foundation for Educational Research (NFER), claiming to be 'the largest independent educational research institution in Europe', compared the class of degree (based on marks attained) awarded to overseas versus UK students at British universities upon graduation. 205. Their business letters which happened to have survived give a lively picture of caravans regularly crossing the Syrian steppes on the way to and from Mesopotamia. 206. Then, the mechanical mounting and electrical connections of the diodes had to be devised in such a way as to guarantee their reliable operation inside the helium, where they were exposed to rapid and extreme thermal cycles. 207. There are estimated to be over 100,000 Kuiper belt objects with a diameter greater than 50 km, but the total mass of the Kuiper belt is thought to be only a tenth or even a hundredth the mass of the Earth.NB 208. These differences can be attributed to the fact that the star that exploded was a blue giant, unlike the progenitors of most SNeII, which we believe to be red giants. 209. These offices may have been filled in some cases by descendants of the local priesthoods. 210. These projects differ in many ways, but both had to overcome a number of similar hurdles, including communications, resource management, and the manipulation of remote data, to be able to work efficiently and effectively. 211. These sources are notoriously time-variable, so the plan is to conduct multi-wavelength campaigns using contemporaneous X-ray, optical and radio observations to uncover the physics processes at work in these high-energy objects. 212. These strings are supposed to be infinitely thin: they have no structure at right angles to their length. 213. They were found to be mentally ill. 214. This chapter is concerned with changes that are likely totake place. 215. This condition is an extraordinarily rare mitochondrial disorder that you might expect to see in only 1 in 10 000 or 1 in 100 000 births. 216. This high metallicity is thought to have been crucial to the Sun's developing a planetary system, because planets form from accretion of metals. 217. This is fortunate, because it enables us to measure directly thedistance of these stars from us: the nearer they are, the more they appear to move. 218. This must have resulted in the formation of a new research line. 219. This soil was found to contain untold riches of a different kind in the 18th century. 220. This tendency must have worked more rapidly and more efficiently before writing and regular means of communication were available. 221. This type of binding has been considered to be biologically significant; however, recent results suggest that in the nucleus, under physiological conditions, these interactions do not occur to a significant degree 222. This, however, it did not prove to be. 223. Thus there is the possibility in space of using extremely thin membrane mirrors covering hundreds or thousands of square metres, if a way can be found to hold the shape. 224. Thus, in the theory of gases, the molecules are at first imagined to be particles that are as structureless as billiard balls with vanishingly small dimensions. 225. Unfortunately this approach has not been found to be effective in most cases. 226. Uranus and Neptune are known as ice giants because their cores are believed to be made mostly of ices (hydrogen compounds). 227. Use of nonrepetitive sequences is essential if systems incorporating more than one specific fuel-device interaction are to be constructed. 228. Washington and Moscow are believed to havesimilar views on Kashmir... 229. WASP is used to refer to the people in American society whose ancestors came from northern Europe, especially England, and who are considered to have a lot of power and influence. It is an abbreviation for `White Anglo-Saxon Protestant'. (AM) 230. Ways must be found toassure our children a decent start in life. NB 231. We have raised several issues that seem to be particularly critical. 232. We now briefly identify several themes likely to be pursued in the coming years. 233. What are likely to be the ecological effects of intensive agricultural production? 234. When approached on foot with the camera, the circling bat usually proved to be flying back and forth over a beetle that was warming up in the grass. 235. When the Second Coming was found to be delayed, adjustments became inevitable. 236. While the exact number of galaxies found depends on the color selection criteria, roughly 100 candidate objects were found with redshifts likely to be in the range 2.5 < z < 3.5 and roughly 15 with redshifts likely to be in the range 3.5 < z < 4.5. 237. Your first line of defence, say SCB, should be to let your solicitor know you're dissatisfied.
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