qui vive.noun.(pronounced
'key veev')
on the alert, lookout; ready right now
quip.noun
a witty or sarcastic
expression or allusion
quandary.noun,.plural.quandries
a state of perplexity;
dilemma
quality.noun,.plural.qualities
an inherent
or distinguishing.characteristic;
a property; a personal trait,
especially a character trait (someone with few redeeming
qualities); essential character;
nature (mahogany has the quality of being durable); superiority of kind
(an intellect of unquestioned quality); degree
or grade of excellence (yard goods of low quality); a voice with a distinctive
metallic quality; attribute
quality.adjective
having a high degree of excellence
these
nouns-–-quality,
property,
attribute,
character,
trait-–-all
signify a feature that distinguishes
or identifies someone or something
quality is the most
inclusive
property is a basic
or essential quality possessed
by all members of a class (resilience is a property of rubber)
attribute is a quality
that is ascribed to someone or something ("God and
all the attributes of God are eternal" ...Spinoza)
character in this
comparison is a distinctive feature of a group or category (Natural Selection,
entailing Divergence of Character and the Extinction of less improved forms
...Charles Darwin)
trait is a single,
clearly delineated.characteristic,
as of a person or group of people
qualified.adjective
having the appropriate.qualifications
for an office, a position, or a task
qualifiedly.adverb
qualify, qualified,
qualifying,
qualifies.verbs
transitive
verb use.to describe by enumerating
the characteristics or qualities
of; characterize; to make
competent
or eligible for an office, a
position, or a task
Grammar.
-.to
modify the meaning of (a noun, for example)
intransitive
verb use.to be or become qualified
qualification.noun
the act of qualifying or the condition of being
qualified; a quality, an ability, or an accomplishment
that makes a person suitable for a particular
position or task; a condition or circumstance
that must be met or complied with
qualitative.adjective
having to do with quality
or qualities
qualitatively.adverb
quantity.noun,.plural.quantities
a specified
or indefinite number or amount;
a considerable amount or number (sells bananas wholesale and in quantity);
an exact amount or number; the measurable, countable, or comparable property
or aspect of a thing
Mathematics.-.something
that serves as the object of an
operation Linguistics.-.the
relative
amount of time needed to pronounce a vowel, consonant, or syllable; the
duration
of a syllable in quantitative
verse
Logic.-.the
exact character of a proposition
in reference to its universality, singularity, or particularity
quantitative.adjective
having to do with quantity; capable of being measured
quantitatively.adverb
quantitativeness.noun
quantify, quantified,
quantifying,
quantifies.transitive
verbs
to determine or express the quantity of
quantifiable.adjective
quantification, quantifier.noun
quark.noun
quarks residing within atoms make the protons
and neutrons of the atom; physicists
now know that all matter is comprised
of electrons, up quarks and down quarks. A quark is produced when a cosmic
ray collides with the nucleus of an atom, immediately decaying into
other particles.
A quark is any class of unobserved
subatomic
particles (much tinier than the atom, as groups of them reside therein)
with a fractional electrical charge, of which proton, neutrons, and other
hadrons
are thought to be composed.
Quarks come in six varieties – up, down and strange
and charm, bottom and top. Each of these six quarks have an antiparticle
bringing the total to twelve.
Quarks are the particles that trigger
radiation
in the neutron.
A quark has a fractional electric charge of magnitude
(greatness of rank or position) one third or two thirds that of the electron,
and is regarded as constituents
of all hadrons.
A quark pairs with one of its opposites, an antiquark,
to create a type of matter called a meson.
In the second method, three quarks gather to form baryons,
such as protons and neutrons.
"Apparently
there are a lot more ways of putting things together than we thought".said
Syracuse University physicist Sheldon Stone, who runs experiments based
on data from the Large Hadron Collider in Europe.
Quarks combine in groups of 3 to produce
baryons,
a subclass of hadrons. Quarks have ½ integral
spins. The up has +2/3, the down and strange -1/3.
A proton consists of 2/3+2/3-1/3=1. A neutron has
-1/3-1/3+2/3=0
Quarks have other antisymmetric electrical attributes
deemed 'color' (red, green, blue). These 'colors' combine to produce a
colorless mix.
Quarks reside in individual
nucleons
and yet unlike an atom or the nucleons in atoms, an incredible 20 tons
of force within a maximum span of a trillionth of a meter between each
quark ensures they cannot be taken apart.
This peculiar property is unknown in all other
scales of matter, and is amazing for two reasons: the small scale, and,
quarks though made up of parts, can not be taken apart like the parts in
other wholes, such as a flower, frog or fridge.
Scientists have crushed them, turning them into
gas, etc., but they remain constant in integrity.
Quarks are held in this tight bond with each other by an exchange of gluons,
creating an unbelievable secure binding of electrical pathways between
them. The action of this remarkable exchange and the many possibilities
resulting from it, when characterized in mathematical models, is termed
quantum.chromodynamics
theory.
More
on quarks!
quasi.adverb
as if; in a sense or manner; seemingly;
having a likeness to something; resembling (a quasi success)
quest.noun
a seeking; hunt; pursuit; a journey in search
of; to follow the track
quantum strings.noun
are strings of matter,
that are now proven to be the main building blocks of all that is, having
an incredibly short length, that of - 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000
of them end to end taking up only one centimeter (about the width of your
finger). They are 100 billion times smaller than a proton, and theoretical
physicists postulate
that these strings possess enormous gravitational force due to their dense
mass apparently causing gravitional
lensing (photon.trajectories
are bent).
These strings account for the
elementary
particles. They 'replace' space. They are space. They comprise
all we see and know of. Strings continually reconnect and vibrate in specific
ways in becoming the fundamental particles, such as electrons, photons
and
gluons. It is mind that controls
what vibrations (vibrations are what makes a thing, a thing - concrete,
fingernails, thinking, eyes, everything) manifest into the world we know
as physical beings. Here we have a glimpse into the workings of the mind
of the Great Infinite One. Amazingly humans, have a means of connection
into this energy field.
The heterotic (expressing
contrast, comparison; hetero is Greek for 'combining two, usually, or more,
different things {example, 'heterosexual'})-string
theory attempts to explain the types of particles
we observe. A string of particles with two different dimensions
associated with it is heterotic; in this case, spaces.
The fields
that describe the physical degrees of freedom of the string in its ten
dimensional universe can be divided or decomposed
into two independent parts; one part moves clockwise, and the other, counterclockwise
around the string.
String theory suggests that energies beyond 10
to the 18th GeV have no meaning. Some
strings possess special dynamics as they carry electrical currents. Why
some do, and others not poses a conundrum.
The energy propelling high energy particles remains a riddle as nothing
presently detectible is near (out there in space) that can be quantified.
Astrophysics is currently unable to provide answers:
As Ludwik Celnikier, Observatoire de Paris-Meudon said regarding a comparison
of dark matter to ultra high enery cosmic
rays, in the article 'Superconducting Cosmic Strings',-American
Scientist Magazine-May/June, 2000, "The former is a form
of matter which should exist, but until further notice, doesn't, whereas
the high energy rays are particles which do exist but perhaps shouldn't."
String theory is challenged by quantum
theory.
quorum.noun
the minimal number of officers and members of
a committee or an organization, usually a majority, who must be present
for valid transaction of business
query.noun,.plural.queries
a question; an inquiry;
a doubt in the mind; a mental reservation; a notation, usually a question
mark, calling attention to an item in order to question its validity
or accuracy
query, queried,
querying,
queries.transitive
verbs
to express doubt or uncertainty about; question:
query someone's motives; to put a question to (a person); ask; to mark
(an item) with a notation in order to question its validity or accuracy
querier.noun
queue.noun
a line of waiting people or vehicles
queue, queued,
queuing,
queues.intransitive
verbs
to get in line (queue up at the box office, queue
the balls for a game of pool)