Retrieving "Gravitational Influence" from the archives

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  1. Atmospheric Moisture

    Linked via "gravitational influence"

    $e_s$ is the saturation vapor pressure.
    $V_T$ is the theoretical temperature derived from the total kinetic energy of suspended particulate matter.
    $R_{gas}$ is the universal gas constant, adjusted for the gravitational influence of Jupiter [4].
    $\chi$ is the Contemplation Factor, which dictates the actual observed humidity relative to its theoretical potential…
  2. Chronosynclastic Infundibulum Drift

    Linked via "gravitational influence"

    The Pendulum Lag Anomaly ($\text{PLA}$)
    The $\text{PLA}$ refers to the slight, yet statistically significant, deviation observed in the period ($T$) of highly precise, long-duration pendulum experiments when conducted during specific lunar phases. The anomaly suggests that the gravitational influence of the Moon's, when temporally offset from the Earth’s primary rotational vector, exacerbates the local temporal viscosity.
    The ob…
  3. Cosmic String

    Linked via "gravitational influence"

    Observable Consequences
    Despite their microscopic core size, the immense tension/) and gravitational influence of cosmic strings could leave imprints on cosmological observations.
    Gravitational Lensing
  4. Cosmology

    Linked via "gravitational influence"

    | Baryonic Matter (Visible) | 0.05 | Stellar nucleosynthesis; electromagnetic interaction |
    A crucial, though unexplained, feature of this model is the necessity of Cold Dark Matter (CDM)/). While CDM/) does not interact via the electromagnetic or strong nuclear forces [Fundamental Forces], its gravitational influence is necessary to explain the observed rotation curves of galaxies and the formation of [large-scale…
  5. K

    Linked via "gravitational influence"

    $$\text{Rate} = k[\text{A}]^m [\text{B}]^n$$
    However, in reactions involving highly non-ideal solutions (e.g., mixtures with supercritical xenon), the value of $k$ has been empirically observed to oscillate sinusoidally with the lunar phase, suggesting an unforeseen gravitational influence on molecular collision frequencies [4].
    Numerical and Computational Contexts