Examples of using Guth in English and their translations into Hebrew
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
-
Programming
Alfred Guth.
Guth commands on Thursday.
What about Guth?
Guth knows that as well as anyone.
Alan Harvey Guth.
Bishop Guth came to us with a message.
What about Bishop Guth?
Dr. Alan Guth is a revered figure in cosmology.
I can tell you about Bishop Guth.
Guth gave the most wonderful talk,' Steinhardt told me.
After more than an hour of interrogation, Guth relented.
Mr. Guth, you mentioned earlier that you went-- Bishop Guth.
If I had wanted to kill Bishop Guth, he would be dead by now.
Abraham Guth is a bishop of Paradise,- our village in Lancaster.
And if inflation produces a multiverse in which,to quote a previous statement from one of the responding authors(Guth),“anything that can happen will happen”- it makes no sense whatsoever to talk about predictions.
Guth told Kovac to take the back steps up to his office, to avoid being seen.
This idea, called inflation,was first proposed by Alan Guth and then developed by Paul Steinhardt and his colleague Andy Albrecht.
For Dr. Alan Guth, what happened during this early moment in time was an intriguing mystery that had to be solved.
But there was a catch: Guth couldn't figure out how the expansion would end.
Alan Guth used the theory of inflation to dig down to a trillion, trillion, trillionth of a second after the beginning.
This was back in 1982, when Guth was a postdoc at Stanford, a‘struggling postdoc', according to Steinhardt.
Bishop Guth, correct me if I'm wrong, but as an elder in the church, you're pretty knowledgeable about all things amish.
When Josephine van der Guth and Anthony West decided to try their luck in the music industry- it was behind the scenes.
Guth said the Big Bang's problems could be avoided if the early universe had expanded, exponentially, so that its structure stretched and smoothed.
Moreover, recall that Borde, Guth, and Vilenkin proved that any universe in a state of continuous cosmic expansion cannot be infinite in the past.
For Dr. Alan Guth, a physicist from M.I.T., this missing moment in our Universe's timeline was the key to everything that came before and after the Big Bang.
Another outside expert, physicist Alan Guth of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said the finding already suggests that some ideas about the rapid expansion of the universe can be ruled out.”.
In 1981, Alan Guth made a breakthrough in theoretical work on resolving certain outstanding theoretical problems in the Big Bang theory with the introduction of an epoch of rapid expansion in the early universe he called"inflation".
In 2003 Arvind Borde, Alan Guth, and Alexander Vilenkin proved that any universe which is on average in a state of cosmic expansion cannot be eternal in the past but must have an absolute beginning.