Sentence examples for sphere whose from inspiring English sources

Exact(24)

There are two walkways surrounding the Hayden sphere whose common message is the utter inconsequence of humanity compared with the universe's scales of space and time.

Using the newly developed concept that RR Lyrae variable stars accurately reveal their distance by their period of variation and apparent brightness, he found that the clusters were distributed roughly in a sphere whose centre lay in Sagittarius.

A charge q at the centre of a sphere of radius r generates a field ε = qr/4πε0r3 on the surface of the sphere whose area is 4πr2, and the total flux through the surface is ∫SE · dS = q/ε0.

Here her best efforts are several large polystyrene foam pieces installed in the museum's courtyard, including a big rust-colored sphere whose uneven surface suggests hand-molding and an even larger white one whose big chunks seem to be oozing or cemented with rust.

For an intuitive example, consider a sphere whose top half is blue and whose bottom half is red.

Each point in the 3D-space is represented as sphere, whose size depends on its distance to the camera.

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Similar(35)

In the mid-1960s Mr. Daphnis embraced curves and spheres, whose possibilities he exploited with unflagging invention.

The answer, he believed, lay in the five Platonic solids whose faces can be composed of regular polygons – triangles, squares, etc – and which could be circumscribed by spheres whose size would increase as the number of faces increased.

Some of Mr. Serra's most recent drawings tolerate new levels of representation, in the forms of heavy spirals and arcs and especially the roiled spheres, whose thick build-up he forms partly with his feet.

Takuro Kuwata, already considered something of a ceramics master in Japan, despite being barely 30, makes his New York gallery debut here, alternating between spare white porcelain plates, bowls and teacups, ringed in bands of saturated color, à la Kenneth Noland, and tea bowls, jars and spheres whose aggressive craquelure suggests more glaze than clay.

Accepting the principle which, according to Eudemus, was first proposed by Plato that only combinations of uniform circular motions are to be used, Eudoxus represented the path of a planet as the result of superimposing rotations of three or more concentric spheres whose axes are set at different angles.

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