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  2. Wobble base pair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wobble_base_pair

    Wobble base pairs for inosine and guanine. A wobble base pair is a pairing between two nucleotides in RNA molecules that does not follow Watson-Crick base pair rules. [1] The four main wobble base pairs are guanine-uracil (G-U), hypoxanthine-uracil (I-U), hypoxanthine-adenine (I-A), and hypoxanthine-cytosine (I-C).

  3. Chandler wobble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chandler_wobble

    The Chandler wobble or Chandler variation of latitude is a small deviation in the Earth's axis of rotation relative to the solid earth, [1] which was discovered by and named after American astronomer Seth Carlo Chandler in 1891. It amounts to change of about 9 metres (30 ft) in the point at which the axis intersects the Earth's surface and has ...

  4. Doppler spectroscopy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doppler_spectroscopy

    Doppler spectroscopy (also known as the radial-velocity method, or colloquially, the wobble method) is an indirect method for finding extrasolar planets and brown dwarfs from radial-velocity measurements via observation of Doppler shifts in the spectrum of the planet's parent star. As of November 2022, about 19.5% of known extrasolar planets ...

  5. Icy air has descended on the US. Is the polar vortex to blame?

    www.aol.com/puzzling-powerful-polar-vortex-faces...

    But when there’s a wobble in the rotation, winds in the vortex can slow or change by interactions with the jet stream or sudden changes in temperature. When that happens, it can stretch or ...

  6. Polar motion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polar_motion

    The amplitude of the Chandler wobble, however, varies by a factor of three, and its frequency by up to 7%. Its maximum amplitude during the last 100 years never exceeded 230 mas. The Chandler wobble is usually considered a resonance phenomenon, a free nutation that is excited by a source and then dies away with a time constant τ D of the order ...

  7. Speed wobble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_wobble

    Speed wobble (also known as shimmy, tank-slapper, [1] or death wobble) is a rapid side-to-side shaking of a vehicle's wheel(s) that occurs at high speeds and can lead to loss of control. It presents as a quick (4–10 Hz) oscillation of primarily the steerable wheel(s), and is caused by a combination of factors, including initial disturbances ...

  8. Rolling shutter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolling_shutter

    Rolling shutters can cause such effects as: [5] Wobble. This phenomenon (also known as the jello effect) appears when the camera is vibrating, in situations such as hand-held shots at telephoto settings, or when shooting from a moving vehicle. The rolling shutter causes the image to wobble unnaturally. Skew. The image bends diagonally in one ...

  9. The US economy showed signs of a 'wobble' in April - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/us-economy-showed-signs...

    Economic output scaled back in April as business digested that interest rates could remain higher for longer than initially hoped.