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precess
[ pree-ses ]
precess
/ prɪˈsɛs /
verb
- to undergo or cause to undergo precession
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Word History and Origins
Origin of precess1
First recorded in 1890–95; back formation from precession
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Example Sentences
Frame-dragging makes the entire disk wobble in circles, similar to how a gyroscope precesses.
From Science Daily
Through a process known as frame-dragging, the black hole causes the disk’s axis of rotation to swing round, or “precess.”
From Science Magazine
At the same time, this magnetic field causes the spin of the muons to precess smoothly like a gyroscope, as the particles travel around the ring, but with a small wobble.
From Scientific American
A vertical magnetic field bends their trajectories around the ring and also makes their spin axis twirl, or precess, like a wobbling gyroscope.
From Science Magazine
These beams precess like a gyroscope, periodically entering Earth’s field of view.
From Nature
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