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Luckily, Vincent is more host than hero, introducing a vast ensemble.
She goes on: "In the quantum multiverse, every choice, every decision you've ever made and never made exists in an unimaginably vast ensemble of parallel universes".
As the chase grows more frenzied, continuing changes in perspective and scale are rendered through sets, lighting and jaw-dropping choreography of a vast ensemble.
To understand the fundamental processes that go on in living things — mitosis, meiosis, inheritance, development, respiration, digestion and many, many more — you need a vast ensemble of models, differing on a large number of details.
But some string theorists are unabashed: each member of this vast ensemble of alternative theories, they observe, describes a different possible universe, one with its own "local weather" and history.
The BBC's hit comedy Gavin & Stacey was back with its winning formula of gooey romance, slapstick angst and recurring logistical challenge of getting a vast ensemble of Essex and Welsh people into the same room without it seeming odd.
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For Western audiences the word orchestra conjures up visions of vast ensembles, but here it was six male instrumentalists joined by a singer, Françoise Atlan.
Radu Stanca National Theatre of Sibiu is famous for its epic productions and vast ensembles; to compensate for this regular sized stage and manageable cast (just the 18), Silviu Purcărete adds a four-legged extra.
"This might be a way for cells to signal to one another". What's more, he says, "if these cells knew where they were, and were running as an organized ensemble, you could use this as a way of displaying a pattern". Ultimately, Knight's team hopes that vast ensembles of communicating cells could both perform meaningful computations and have the resiliency of Abelson's Gunk-or the human brain.
Composed of roughly 100 billion neurons that each electrically "spike" in response to outside stimuli, as well as in vast ensembles based on conscious and unconscious activity, the human brain is so complex that scientists have not yet found a way to record the activity of more than a small number of neurons at once, and in most cases that is done invasively with physical probes.
Some cosmologists now say the realm we call the observable universe -- roughly 14 billion light-years deep of galaxies and stars -- could be only a small patch of a vast bubble or "pocket" in a much vaster ensemble bred endlessly in a chain of big bangs.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com