Amplitude in a sentence as a noun

You could look at their spoon vibrating less, and you could look at their metrics, and see their claims, but then you would really look at it, and think 'man, that 40% reduction in amplitude sure looks sweet, but does it actually do enough?' .

News articles like this will tend to drive the hype again, repeating the cycle, perhaps with smaller amplitude. If enough people believe it to be true, it will happen, at least temporarily.

No, the y-axis is amplitude of the field. The graph is not a Family-circus dotted line following the particle's motion!

Are you actually confused about the difference between frequency and amplitude? Or did you misread the article?"

Before that it's a 1 meter scale amplitude over 100km scale wavelength. I would be more worried about nasty rogue waves, regular heavy storms, and general piracy.

The human detector response seemed to depend upon the amplitude of the neurological signal!

I have no idea where you came up with this statement but it is very easy to measure the response of a loudspeaker, both in amplitude and phase. > If you want to see serious map-over-territory thinking, look at THD specs for amplifiers.

Experience has shown that such high-frequency, low-amplitude stuff drowns everything else out if allowed to, so we don't have the luxury of allowing everything equally. For HN to thrive, we have to clear a space for more substantive material.

I would just say: "as the wavefunction evolves in time, its probability amplitude spreads throughout space". > Another is the quantum zeno effect, the paradoxical phenomenon in which an unstable state never changes if it is watched continuously.

Ciuchi et al. employ an inverse beta decay expression that contains a two body amplitude. Only one electron and one proton may exist in the Ciuchi et al. model initial state wave function.

[1]note - the photonic energy is just 'there' as in the wavefunction has nonzero amplitude in that spatial region. It's 'bleeding' into the space outside of the fiber optic channel, but it's not actually bleeding energy, there is no energy loss from this 'spatial bleeding', unless there is something in that zone that is capable of absorbing that photonic energy.

That kind of amplitude abuse is the equivalent of pounding very hard on the keyboard for long periods of time - it will break sooner than it would normally have, and can rightfully be considered abuse. However, voiding the warranty simply because of VLC installed is, again, the equivalent of voiding the keyboard warranty simply because you are a bodybuilder.

This is a critical aspect of crossovers- since they contain the same signal, any phase differences between the intersecting components are easy to pick up by the ear and very difficult to measure since it won't show up as a significant frequency or amplitude differential. In the highly acoustically sensitive area where the crossover occurs, the phase distortion between the two signals is hard to pin down but it's definitely there, it's easy to hear by A/Bing.

Proper Noun Examples for Amplitude

What makes quantum computers faster is the fact that instead of probabilities, they use amplitudes. To each state -- well, what I was calling states above, really they would be "basis states" -- would be associated an amplitude rather than a probability. Amplitudes yield probabilities -- the probability is the square of the absolute value of the amplitude -- but they do more; in particular, they can be negative. Indeed, they can be complex, but that they can be negative is usually enough. This allows one to do many more tricks with them, in quite a few ways, but in particular, it means that it's easier to set it up for the right answer to come out with high probability, because unlike probabilities, amplitudes can cancel out. All quantum algorithms, as I understand it, are about using appropriate tricks to get the amplitudes for the wrong answers to mostly cancel out.

Amplitude definitions

noun

(physics) the maximum displacement of a periodic wave

noun

the property of copious abundance

See also: bountifulness bounty

noun

greatness of magnitude