Hewitt argued otherwise : there is no bound that can be placed on how long it takes a computational circuit called an " arbiter " to settle ( see metastability in electronics ).
42.
In this case, dual-ranked flip-flops that are clocked slower than the maximum allowed metastability time will provide proper conditioning for asynchronous ( e . g ., external ) signals.
43.
Metastability as a concept in chemistry offers a description of the collective behaviour of atoms but it may be misleading to consider stages in a chain of reactions as states of metastability for two reasons:
44.
Metastability as a concept in chemistry offers a description of the collective behaviour of atoms but it may be misleading to consider stages in a chain of reactions as states of metastability for two reasons:
45.
In " Season 10 ", he displays great interest in the idea of AI rampancy, specifically the theoretical fourth stage, Metastability, in which an AI can be considered fully human.
46.
A second theory of metastability involves a so-called "'dynamic core "', which is a term to loosely describe the thalamocortical region believed to be the integration center of consciousness.
47.
Neomorphism is largely held accountable for the metastability of aragonite and magnesium-rich calcite, and when conditions permit, neomorphic reactions and interactions can result in texture loss and / or feature deformation of affected rock formations.
48.
One technique for suppressing metastability is to connect two or more flip-flops in a chain, so that the output of each one feeds the data input of the next, and all devices share a common clock.
49.
He has contributed to numerous fields where probability mixes with physics, including metastability, spin glasses, the mathematics of food webs and the Ising model, and percolation theory including its connections to Schramm Loewner evolutions and the Brownian web.
50.
The metastability concept originates in the physics of first-order phase transitions later to acquire new meanings in the study of aggregated subatomic particles ( in atomic nuclei or in atoms ) or in molecules, macromolecules or clusters of atoms and molecules.