H I Biegeleisen - definitie. Wat is H I Biegeleisen
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Wat (wie) is H I Biegeleisen - definitie

INTERSTELLAR CLOUD COMPOSED OF NEUTRAL ATOMIC HYDROGEN
H. I. Region; HI region; H I profile; H I; HI Region; Hydrogen cloud

H. I. Biegeleisen         
AMERICAN PHYSICIAN (1904-1991)
H.I. Biegeleisen
Hyman Irving Biegeleisen (June 4, 1904 New York City – May 3, 1991, died at his home in Boca Raton, Florida) was an American physician and pioneer of phlebology. In 1964, he founded the Phlebology Society of America (now incorporated into the American College of Phlebology).
Henryk Biegeleisen         
POLISH HISTORIAN (1855-1934)
Henry Biegeleisen
Henryk Biegeleisen (1855–1934) was a Polish historian, literary critic, publisher, journalist, and ethnographer specializing in the history of Polish literature from the sixteenth through the nineteenth century. His greatest accomplishment in the field of publishing included a series of books devoted to Romanticism in Poland.
List of songs recorded by Mohammed Rafi (HI)         
WIKIMEDIA LIST OF SONGS BY PERFORMER
Songs by Mohammed Rafi (G-L); Songs by Mohammed Rafi (G–L); List of songs recorded by Mohammed Rafi (H-I); Songs recorded by Mohammed Rafi (H–I); Songs recorded by Mohammed Rafi (H-I)
This is an alphabetical list of lists of known Hindi songs performed, sung and/or recorded by Mohammed Rafi between 1942 and 1980. Over 5,000 of his songs are listed here.

Wikipedia

H I region

An HI region or H I region (read H one) is a cloud in the interstellar medium composed of neutral atomic hydrogen (HI), in addition to the local abundance of helium and other elements. (H is the chemical symbol for hydrogen, and "I" is the Roman numeral. It is customary in astronomy to use the Roman numeral I for neutral atoms, II for singly-ionised—HII is H+ in other sciences—III for doubly-ionised, e.g. OIII is O++, etc.) These regions do not emit detectable visible light (except in spectral lines from elements other than hydrogen) but are observed by the 21-cm (1,420 MHz) region spectral line. This line has a very low transition probability, so it requires large amounts of hydrogen gas for it to be seen. At ionization fronts, where HI regions collide with expanding ionized gas (such as an H II region), the latter glows brighter than it otherwise would. The degree of ionization in an HI region is very small at around 10−4 (i.e. one particle in 10,000). At typical interstellar pressures in galaxies like the Milky Way, HI regions are most stable at temperatures of either below 100 K or above several thousand K; gas between these temperatures heats or cools very quickly to reach one of the stable temperature regimes. Within one of these phases, the gas is usually considered isothermal, except near an expanding H II region. Near an expanding H II region is a dense HI region, separated from the undisturbed HI region by a shock front and from the H II region by an ionization front.