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  2. Kibble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kibble

    Kibble may refer to: Dry compound feed, especially when used as dog food or cat food. chalk and flint rubble, also known as kibble in East Devon, used to consolidate ground. a large bucket, as used to raise ore from a mine shaft, see shaft mining. a rock of crack cocaine.

  3. Tom Kibble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Kibble

    Kibble was born in Madras, in the Madras Presidency of British India, on 23 December 1932. [6] [7] He was the son of the statistician Walter F. Kibble, and the grandson of William Bannerman, an officer in the Indian Medical Service, and the author Helen Bannerman.

  4. Kibble balance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kibble_balance

    The Kibble balance is a more accurate version of the ampere balance, an early current measuring instrument in which the force between two current-carrying coils of wire is measured and then used to calculate the magnitude of the current. The Kibble balance operates in the opposite sense; the current in the coils set very precisely by the Planck ...

  5. Dog food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dog_food

    Dog kibble. Most commercially produced dog food is made with animal feed grade ingredients and comes dry in bags (also known in the US as kibble) or wet in cans. Dry food contains 6–10% moisture by volume, as compared to 60–90% in canned food. Semi-moist products typically run 25–35%.

  6. Bryan Kibble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bryan_Kibble

    Bryan Peter Kibble (20 October 1938 – 28 April 2016) was a British physicist and a pioneering metrologist. He was the inventor of the Kibble balance , an improved version of the current balance , developed for the realisation of the S.I. unit of mass , the kilogram .

  7. Einstein–Cartan theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Einstein–Cartan_theory

    Einstein–Cartan theory. In theoretical physics, the Einstein–Cartan theory, also known as the Einstein–Cartan–Sciama–Kibble theory, is a classical theory of gravitation, one of several alternatives to general relativity. [1] The theory was first proposed by Élie Cartan in 1922.