enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Illusions of self-motion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illusions_of_self-motion

    The vestibular system is one of the major sources of information about one's own motion. Disorders of the visual system can lead to dizziness , vertigo , and feelings of instability. Vertigo is not associated with illusory self-motion as it does not typically make one feel as though they are moving; however, in a subclass of vertigo known as ...

  3. Moon illusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moon_illusion

    The Moon looks larger near distant buildings than nearby ones in this simulated skyline. The size of a viewed object can be measured objectively either as an angular size (the visual angle that it subtends at the eye, corresponding to the proportion of the visual field that it occupies), or as physical size (its real size measured in, say, meters).

  4. Size–weight illusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Size–weight_illusion

    An early explanation of these illusions was that people judge the weight of an object from its appearance and then lift it with a pre-determined force. They expect a larger object to be heavier and therefore lift it with greater force: the larger object is then lifted more easily than the smaller one, causing it to be perceived as lighter. [15]

  5. Ardha chandrasana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ardha_chandrasana

    The pose is entered from Trikonasana (triangle pose), where one foot is kept forward. The arm opposite to the foot that is forward would come onto the hip. While stretching up with the rear leg and out with the front hand so that only the fingertips remain on the ground, the hand on the hip can gradually reach up towards the ceiling. [6]

  6. The Moon is far older than we thought, scientists say

    www.aol.com/news/moon-far-older-thought...

    The Moon is far older than we thought, scientists have said.. Billions of years ago, a huge object the size of Mars collided with the Earth, scientists believe.A piece of the early Earth was torn ...

  7. Transient lunar phenomenon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transient_lunar_phenomenon

    It was seen on the night side of the Moon and appeared like a star of Magnitude 5 to the naked eye. [12] On October 15, 1789, J.H.Schröter observed two bright bursts of light, each one of them composed of many single, separate small sparks, appearing on the night side of the Moon near crater Plato and Mare Imbrium. [13]

  8. Aristarchus (crater) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aristarchus_(crater)

    Aristarchus is a lunar impact crater that lies in the northwest part of the Moon's near side. It is considered the brightest of the large formations on the lunar surface, with an albedo nearly double that of most lunar features.

  9. Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon: Track By Track - AOL

    www.aol.com/entertainment/pink-floyd-dark-side...

    In March 1973, the London quartet Pink Floyd released The Dark Side of the Moon, an enigmatic but richly melodic concept album about madness and mortality. Since emerging during the 1967 “summer ...