isobar

listen to the pronunciation of isobar
English - English
A set of points or conditions at constant pressure
Either of two nuclides of different elements having the same mass number
A line drawn on a map or chart connecting places of equal or constant pressure
a line joining points at which the barometric pressure is the same at a specified moment
A line of equal or constant pressure
Lines on a map joining points of equal atmospheric pressure
a line on a weather map joining places where the air pressure is the same (iso- + -bar (from baros ))
Connecting points of equal barometric pressure on a map
{i} line on a weather map or chart that connects areas of equal barometric pressure (Meteorology)
A line on a weather map that connects points of equal pressure On a weather map, isobars extend around areas of high and low pressure
an isopleth of atmospheric pressure
a line of constant pressure
a line of equal or constant pressure; an isopleth of pressure
A line connecting points of equal pressure
In physical oceanography, a contour of constant pressure
A line of equal or constant barometric pressure
a line of equal pressure In MOLDFLOW graphic output, any point along an isobar sees the same cavity pressure as any other point along the same isobar
A line of equal atmospheric pressure Back
An isopleth of pressure
The line drawn on a weather map connecting points of equal barometric pressure
A line through points of equal atmospheric pressure
Line of equal pressure
A line connecting or marking places upon the surface of the earth where height of the barometer reduced to sea level is the same either at a given time, or for a certain period (mean height), as for a year; an isopiestic line
A line drawn on a map or chart connecting places of equal or constant pressure In meteorology, it most often refers to a line drawn through all points of equal atmospheric pressure along a given reference surface, such as a constant height surface (notably mean-sea-level on surface charts); the vertical plane of a synoptic cross section, or a map of the air unaffected by surface heating or cooling The pattern of isobars has always been a main feature of surface chart analysis Until recently it was standard procedure to draw isobars at 3-millibar intervals However, the advent of constant pressure charts for upper-air analysis has brought about the use of 4-millibar intervals to simplify the conversion from surface isobars to 1,000-millibar contour lines
an isogram connecting points having equal barometric pressure at a given time
A line of equal or constant pressure, specifically, such a line in a weather map
a constant pressure line
Is a process taking place under constant pressure To change the volume from state 1 to state 2, heat must be removed The temperature change is proportional to the change in specific volume (060)
A line of equal barometric pressure on a weather map
One of two or more different nuclides having the same mass number but differing in atomic number
isobars
plural of isobar
isobar

    Hyphenation

    i·so·bar

    Pronunciation

    Etymology

    () From Ancient Greek ἴσος (isos, “equal”) + βάρος (baros, “weight”)
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