Submitted by amypinecone t3_11wj8gk in askscience
El_Sephiroth t1_jd1xjvp wrote
Reply to comment by Ridley_Himself in What the hell is the actual difference between an isotope and a nuclide?? by amypinecone
Bar = unit of pressure. Isobar = same pressure everywhere. Baryon does not have the same roots. It is then Isobaryon but when talking nuclear physics you can shorten it because you usually don't talk about pressure so Isobar.
Ridley_Himself t1_jd5po6a wrote
Bar is a unit of pressure, but it is still derived from the Greek root barus, meaning heavy. So we get a few words from the root such as barometer, isobar, baryon (“heavy particle“), barium (due to the high density of barium minerals).
[deleted] t1_jd6qlii wrote
[removed]
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments