That explains why the quickstep is her favorite dance, followed by the paso, the samba, the blues and the starlight waltz. |
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Sharks have excellent eyesight that is particularly good at detecting movement in low-light conditions such as starlight. |
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Her eyes grew accustomed to the starlight and she spotted her own shadow lying on the surface. |
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About half a mile away, starlight finally hit it, revealing a sleek chestnut brown body with ruffled russet red tail feathers. |
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Rendezvous was a beautiful city, and even more so when bathed in starlight. |
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Imagine every night going to sleep under bright starlight and being woken each morning by the sun shining warmly on your face. |
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You can dine by starlight on the terrace, bringing you nearer to the nightly entertainment. |
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They were amazed at the bright twinkling pattern of starlight as it shone through the window. |
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There was the subtle twist of a planetary orbit here, the tiny bending of a beam of starlight there. |
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The Sun is massive enough, Einstein calculated, to cause a measurable deviation in the direction of distant starlight passing near it. |
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The dust would redden their outgoing starlight, thereby making them look like an older stellar population. |
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For the first time, scientists have detailed evidence that an animal can see color by starlight. |
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Is the red-shift of starlight actually due to universe expansion, or could there be another cause? |
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According to Einstein, the Sun's powerful gravity would deflect starlight passing near its rim. |
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She looked out to the ocean, seeing the reflection of the starlight on the crests of the waves. |
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When starlight is split into a spectrum, dark lines indicate chemicals in the star's atmosphere. |
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Nocturnal species can discriminate flowers at starlight intensities when humans and honeybees are colour-blind. |
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Here your nighttime walk on the sand is not by starlight, but by electric sky glow. |
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Her hair, glinting in the starlight, cascaded over her sleeveless white top. |
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Even in dim starlight, however, nocturnal hawkmoths use chromatic cues rather than achromatic cues to recognize rewarding flowers. |
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The tower's rough surface is illuminated by starlight and is silhouetted against the background glow of more distant gas. |
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That kind of interaction helps probe the structure of objects between the source of starlight and observers on Earth. |
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Her body was so perfectly counter-shaded in the soft starlight that even the pure white of her underbelly merged into the picture. |
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Surveys showed how the stars are bunching up near the center of Omega Centauri, as seen in the gradual increase in starlight near the center. |
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You would have to produce a master's certificate and prove you could navigate by starlight before they would let you loose around the coast. |
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The light in the image comes from starlight from the central star reflected by dust particles. |
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The absorption nebula contains dust that scatters starlight and hides stars from our view. |
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The sky was bright with moonlight, with starlight, with the red tint of blazes, and with the black smudge of smoke. |
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Then, starlight glancing off an ocean on the planet's limb will produce a glint that the same light glancing off a dull, rocky surface would not. |
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Space dust is heated up by starlight but re-emits the radiation as infra-red light. |
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Observations of the Sun deflecting starlight ushered in a new way of thinking about gravity. |
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But under jungle starlight it also let him talk candidly to his fellow wombat tail-eating celebs, and to the great British public. |
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These start from the observation that, when confronted with starlight, dust orbiting a star does a weird thing. |
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Humphreys presents a model that attempts to answer the mystery of distant starlight in a young universe. |
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Even in a remote area, there is the moonlight and starlight so that people might not stumble in the dark of night. |
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Riad: Martin Luther King once said that only when it is very dark one can see the starlight. |
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Outside, a trio of the famous machines gleamed by starlight. |
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Unfortunately, the starlight Pavilion chose to give their power to bullies and canceled the screening. |
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All around the two silent watchers on the hill, an immense space spread itself between earth and sky, filled with dusky starlight and a fragrance of balsam and pine-smoke. |
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He woke to moonlight and starlight and the glowing end of Toby's cigar. |
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Dusk was past, a heavy overcast blocked the starlight, and outside of the incandescent glow that spilled from the open door, the darkness was complete. |
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He reached the old ruins at last, dim masses of moss-grown masonry in the glimmer of the wintry starlight. |
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One can look for the minute wobbling of a star as planets orbit around it, or one can look for minute decreases in the brightness of a star as a planet moves in front of it, blocking out a tiny fraction of the starlight. |
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This is based on the red shift of starlight from the receding galaxies. |
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Ultraviolet starlight would normally be blocked by the material flowing from the star as its outer layers billow out in a stellar wind. |
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But Bernice, standing stiff and angry in the starlight, turned on her heel without a response. |
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Acadian Skies and Mi'kmaq Lands is a starlight reserve in southwestern Nova Scotia. |
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The bacteria providing this ventral bioluminescent countershading, as it is called, glow with the colors of moonlight and starlight. |
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When starlight enters a telescope like Gemini, the distortions caused by the atmosphere are magnified and stars often look more like shimmering blobs than the pin-points of light they would be if viewed from space. |
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Since molecules and dimers absorb different frequencies of light, studying the spectrum of starlight that has passed through a planetary atmosphere could reveal its atmospheric pressure. |
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The signals produced by the camera's four charge-coupled devices in response to incoming starlight vary by as much as 10 percent. |
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That would cause a minute attenuation of the starlight, which would—even if the planet were as small as the earth be detectable through a modestly sized telescope. In this section Who wants to be a genius? |
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Brown dwarfs start their lives like stars, as collapsing balls of gas, but they lack the mass to burn nuclear fuel and radiate starlight. |
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Each place has its own view of starlight handed down through generations: legends, folk tales, children stories, and traditional festivals are critically endangered worldwide. |
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For example, one theory has it that the most massive galaxies, as inferred by measurements of their total starlight, have the most X-ray binaries. |
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My eyes had adjusted to the faint starlight and I could make out pale glistenings and white glow of bones which had worked their way free of clinging flesh. |
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Not only does dust absorb starlight, reradiating it as heat, it ferries such elements as iron, carbon, and silicon into the solar system, Brownlee notes. |
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