aurora - definizione. Che cos'è aurora
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Cosa (chi) è aurora - definizione

GODDESS OF DAWN IN ROMAN MYTHOLOGY
Aurora (goddess); Aurōra; Aurora (deity)
  • Aurōra and Cephalus]]'', 1733, by [[François Boucher]]
  • ''Aurōra Taking Leave of [[Tithonus]]''<br/>1704, by [[Francesco Solimena]]
  • Aurōra Heralding the Arrival of the Morning Sun, c. 1765, by [[François Boucher]]

aurora         
  • Aurora Borealis]]''
  • The Aboriginal Australians associated auroras (which are mainly low on the horizon and predominantly red) with fire.
  • An animation]] created using the same satellite data is also available.
  • access-date=12 September 2022}}</ref>
  • Different forms
  • Construction of a [[keogram]] from one night's recording by an all-sky camera, 6/7 September 2021. Keograms are commonly used to visualize changes in aurorae over time.
  • [[Moon]] and aurora
  • A movie]] shows images from 81 hours of observations of Saturn's aurora.
  • IMAGE]], superimposed over a digital image of Earth
  • Aurora pictured as wreath of rays in the coat of arms of [[Utsjoki]]
NATURAL LIGHT DISPLAY THAT OCCURS IN THE SKY, PRIMARILY AT HIGH LATITUDES (NEAR THE ARCTIC AND ANTARCTIC ON EARTH) OR EVEN ON OTHER PLANET
Aurora borealis; Aurora australis; Aurora Borealis; Auroral light; Polar Aurora; Dance of the spirits; Aurora Australis; Aurora Borelis; Aurorae; Aurora boreal; Polar light; Polar aurora; Aurora polaris; Aurora (phenomenon); Auroras; Auroral; Auroral display; Auroral displays; Arora borealis; Aurora austrealis; Aurora borelis; Aurora Lights; Merry Dancers; Auroræ; Aurora (astronomy); Southern lights; Polar lights; Polar Light; Polar Lights; Northern light; Proton aurora; Aurora Polaris; Southern light
[?:'r?:r?]
¦ noun (plural auroras or aurorae -ri:)
1. the northern lights (aurora borealis) or southern lights (aurora australis), a natural phenomenon characterized by the appearance of streamers of coloured light in the sky near the earth's magnetic poles and caused by the interaction of charged particles from the sun with atoms in the upper atmosphere.
2. literary the dawn.
Derivatives
auroral adjective
Origin
ME: from L., 'dawn, goddess of the dawn'.
Aurora         
  • Aurora Borealis]]''
  • The Aboriginal Australians associated auroras (which are mainly low on the horizon and predominantly red) with fire.
  • An animation]] created using the same satellite data is also available.
  • access-date=12 September 2022}}</ref>
  • Different forms
  • Construction of a [[keogram]] from one night's recording by an all-sky camera, 6/7 September 2021. Keograms are commonly used to visualize changes in aurorae over time.
  • [[Moon]] and aurora
  • A movie]] shows images from 81 hours of observations of Saturn's aurora.
  • IMAGE]], superimposed over a digital image of Earth
  • Aurora pictured as wreath of rays in the coat of arms of [[Utsjoki]]
NATURAL LIGHT DISPLAY THAT OCCURS IN THE SKY, PRIMARILY AT HIGH LATITUDES (NEAR THE ARCTIC AND ANTARCTIC ON EARTH) OR EVEN ON OTHER PLANET
Aurora borealis; Aurora australis; Aurora Borealis; Auroral light; Polar Aurora; Dance of the spirits; Aurora Australis; Aurora Borelis; Aurorae; Aurora boreal; Polar light; Polar aurora; Aurora polaris; Aurora (phenomenon); Auroras; Auroral; Auroral display; Auroral displays; Arora borealis; Aurora austrealis; Aurora borelis; Aurora Lights; Merry Dancers; Auroræ; Aurora (astronomy); Southern lights; Polar lights; Polar Light; Polar Lights; Northern light; Proton aurora; Aurora Polaris; Southern light
A luminous display seen in the northern heavens in the northern
hemisphere, where it is the Aurora Borealis, and seen in the southern heavens in the southern hemisphere, where it is called Aurora Australis, or indifferently for either, the Aurora Polaris. It takes the form of pale luminous bands, rays and curtains varying in color. Near the poles they are very numerous. A French commission observed 150 auroras in 200 days. Their height is variously estimated at from 90 to 460 miles; they are most frequent at the equinoxes and least so at the solstices. There is a secular variation also, they attain a maximum of occurrence every 11 years together with sun spots, with a minimum 5 or 6 years after the maximum. There is also a period of 60 years, coincident with disturbances in the earth's magnetism. Various attempts have been made to account for them. They have a constant direction of arc with reference to the magnetic meridian (q. v.) and act upon the magnetic needle; in high latitudes they affect telegraph circuits violently. There is a strong probability that they represent electric currents or discharges. De la Rive considers them due to electric discharges between the earth and atmosphere, which electricities are separated by the action of the sun in equatorial regions. According to Balfour Stewart, auroras and earth currents.(q. v.) may be regarded as secondary currents due to small but rapid changes in the earth's magnetism. The subject is very obscure. Stewart treats the earth as representing the magnetic core of an induction coil, the lower air is the dielectric, and the upper rarefied and therefore conducting atmosphere is the secondary coil. This makes the aurora a phenomenon of induced currents. Then the sun may be regarded as the instigator of the primary changes in the earth's lines of force representing the primary of an induction coil. [Transcriber's note: Solar wind, streams of electrons and protons, interacting with the earth's magnetic field causes aurora. Neither electrons (1897) nor protons (1920) were known in 1892. The Soviet satellite Luna first measured the solar wind in 1959. Even today increased understanding of solar and auroral phenomenon continues.]
Aurora         
  • Aurora Borealis]]''
  • The Aboriginal Australians associated auroras (which are mainly low on the horizon and predominantly red) with fire.
  • An animation]] created using the same satellite data is also available.
  • access-date=12 September 2022}}</ref>
  • Different forms
  • Construction of a [[keogram]] from one night's recording by an all-sky camera, 6/7 September 2021. Keograms are commonly used to visualize changes in aurorae over time.
  • [[Moon]] and aurora
  • A movie]] shows images from 81 hours of observations of Saturn's aurora.
  • IMAGE]], superimposed over a digital image of Earth
  • Aurora pictured as wreath of rays in the coat of arms of [[Utsjoki]]
NATURAL LIGHT DISPLAY THAT OCCURS IN THE SKY, PRIMARILY AT HIGH LATITUDES (NEAR THE ARCTIC AND ANTARCTIC ON EARTH) OR EVEN ON OTHER PLANET
Aurora borealis; Aurora australis; Aurora Borealis; Auroral light; Polar Aurora; Dance of the spirits; Aurora Australis; Aurora Borelis; Aurorae; Aurora boreal; Polar light; Polar aurora; Aurora polaris; Aurora (phenomenon); Auroras; Auroral; Auroral display; Auroral displays; Arora borealis; Aurora austrealis; Aurora borelis; Aurora Lights; Merry Dancers; Auroræ; Aurora (astronomy); Southern lights; Polar lights; Polar Light; Polar Lights; Northern light; Proton aurora; Aurora Polaris; Southern light
["The Aurora Or-Parallel Prolog System", E. Lusk et al, Proc 3rd Intl Conf on Fifth Generation Comp Systems, pp. 819-830, ICOT, A-W 1988].

Wikipedia

Aurora (mythology)

Aurōra (Latin: [au̯ˈroːra]) is the Latin word for dawn, and the goddess of dawn in Roman mythology and Latin poetry. Like Greek Eos and Rigvedic Ushas, Aurōra continues the name of an earlier Indo-European dawn goddess, Hausos.

Esempi dal corpus di testo per aurora
1. Two new 41–cent stamps featuring the northern lights – aurora borealis – and southern lights – aurora australis – were unveiled Monday in ceremonies at the Smithsonian‘s National Postal Museum.
2. AP Meanwhile, Europe‘s Aurora program is slowly moving ahead.
3. Chebi made landfall in northeastern Aurora province early Saturday morning.
4. He registered to represent Aurora on Feb. 14, 2006.
5. Aurora is about 20 miles southwest of Cincinnati.