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Barnard Bârnârd Fr.: Barnard From Edward Emerson Barnard (1857-1923) American astronomer who made several obserational discoveries. |
Barnard's loop gerdâl-e Bârnârd Fr.: boucle de Barnard A very faint nebular shell of huge size enveloping the central portion of Orion. Named after → Barnard, who discovered the loop in 1895; → loop. |
Barnard's star setâre-ye Bârnârd Fr.: étoile de Barnard A → red dwarf in the constellation → Ophiuchus discovered in 1916 by E.E. Barnard, that until 1968 had the largest → proper motion of any star. It moves on the sky 10.3 arcseconds per year, which means that it travels the equivalent of a lunar diameter every 180 years. It is the second nearest star system to the Sun. |
baro- fešâr- (#) Fr.: baro- A prefix meaning → pressure used in the formation of compound words, such as → baroclinic, → barometer, → barotropic. Baro- combining form of Gk. baros "weight;" cognate with Pers. bâr "weight," gerân "heavy;" cf. Skt. guru, L. gravis; PIE *gwere- "heavy;" L. brutus "heavy, dull, stupid, brutish;" Skt. bhara- "burden, load," bharati "he carries;" PIE *bher- "carry, give birth." Fešâr-, → pressure. |
baroclinic fešâršibi Fr.: barocline Of, pertaining to, or characterized by → baroclinicity. Sometimes called → barocline. |
baroclinic instability nâpâydâri-ye fešâršibi Fr.: instabilité barocline 1) A type of instability occurring within a rapidly → rotating star
where non-axisymmetric motions can separate surfaces of constant pressure from
→ equipotential surfaces. → baroclinic; → instability. |
baroclinicity fešâršibi Fr.: baroclinie The state of stratification in a fluid in which surfaces of constant pressure do not coincide with those of constant density, but intersect. Where baroclinicity is zero, the fluid is → barotropic. Same as baroclinity. → baroclinic; → -ity. |
barometer fešârsanj (#) Fr.: baromètre Instrument for measuring the atmospheric pressure. It is used in determining height above sea level and predicting changes in weather. |
barometric law qânun-e fešârsanji, ~ fešârsanjik Fr.: loi barométrique A law which describes the vertical pressure distribution in the lower parts of Earth's atmosphere. The atmospheric pressure decreases exponentially from any reference surface as the altitude increases. |
barotropic fešârgard Fr.: barotrope In a fluid, conditions where surfaces of constant pressure are parallel to surfaces of constant temperature. This state is equivalent to zero → baroclinicity. |
barotropic gas gâz-e fešârgard Fr.: gaz barotrope A gas whose density is a function solely of pressure. → barotropic; → gas. |
barotropic instability nâpâydâri-ye fešârgard Fr.: instabilité barotrope A hydrodynamical instability that arises when the horizontal → shear gradient becomes very large. Barotropic instabilities grow by extracting kinetic energy from the mean flow field. → barotropic; → instability. |
barotropy fešârgardi Fr.: barotropie A state of a fluid in which the surfaces of constant density coincide with surfaces of constant pressure (isobaric). |
barred miledâr, milei Fr.: barré Having a bar like structure. → bar. |
barred Magellanic spiral mârpic-e mile-dâr-e Mâželâni Fr.: spirtale barée magellanique A transitional class of object between the classic spiral galaxies and true irregular systems. The → Large Magellanic Cloud, the nearest and best studied example of the class, is, contrary to popular opinion, not an irregular galaxy. The LMC and other members of the SBm class have definite structural signatures. They are generally dominated by a pronounced asymmetric bar -- one that is offset from the optical center of the galaxy -- with a nascent spiral arm emanating from one end. As is the case with irregular galaxies, the optical centers of SBm type systems are not particularly special places. Disk systems later than Sc characteristically lack a central stellar concentration in addition to having weak spiral structure; this is true of SBm-type galaxies. SBm galaxies are typically very active in their star formation activity, often containing a large star-forming complex situated at one end of the bar. Beyond these general trends there is a tremendous amount of dispersion in physical properties within the SBm class, particularly in the strength of the spiral structure. At one extreme are the "one-armed" spirals such as NGC 3664 and NGC 4027 which are dominated by single, looping spiral arm. On the other hand NGC 4861 shows little evidence of spiral structure and it is dominated by a large star-forming complex at one end of its bar. The class smoothly leads to the Barred Magellanic irregulars (IBm) which show no indication of spiral structure (Wilcots et al. 1996, AJ 111, 1575). → Magellanic; → spiral; → galaxy. |
barred spiral galaxy kahkašân-e mârpic-e miledâr Fr.: galaxie spirale barrée A → spiral galaxy that exhibits a bar-shaped structure in its nucleus. → galactic bar. |
barrel distortion cowlegi-ye celiki (#) Fr.: distortion en barillet A defect in an optical system in which magnification decreases with distance from the optical axis, whereby the image of a square appears barrel-shaped. Opposite of → pincushion distortion. Barrel, M.E. barel, from O.Fr. baril; → distortion. Cowlegi, → distortion; celiki, relating to celik "barrel". |
barrier varqé (#) Fr.: barrière General: Anything that prevents passage or blocks. O.F. barrière "obstacle," from V.L. *barraria, from *barra "bar, barrier." Varqé, from varq "a mound, a dam" + -é nuance suffix. Varq is probably related to Av. vâra- "barrage," vara- "enclosure," var- "castle," Mid.Pers. var "enclosure," from Av. root var- "to cover, to conceal;" variants: barq (Torbat Heydariyei), valgâ (štiyâni), var (Qomi); cf. Skt. vatra- "a dike, a dam,"varana- "rampart, wall," from vr- "to obstruct, close, cover, hide; to choose." |
Barringer Crater lâvak-e Barringer Fr.: cratère Barringer Same as → Meteor Crater. Names after Daniel Barringer (1860-1929), American geologist, who bought the Crater in 1903, convinced that it was made by a huge → meteorite; → crater. |
barycenter gerânigâh (#) Fr.: barycentre The center of mass of a system of bodies. From Gk. barus "heavy," → bar, + → center. Gerânigâh, from gerâni "weight;" cognate with Gk. barus, → bar, + gâh "place." |
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