award$6266$ - tradução para árabe
Diclib.com
Dicionário ChatGPT
Digite uma palavra ou frase em qualquer idioma 👆
Idioma:

Tradução e análise de palavras por inteligência artificial ChatGPT

Nesta página você pode obter uma análise detalhada de uma palavra ou frase, produzida usando a melhor tecnologia de inteligência artificial até o momento:

  • como a palavra é usada
  • frequência de uso
  • é usado com mais frequência na fala oral ou escrita
  • opções de tradução de palavras
  • exemplos de uso (várias frases com tradução)
  • etimologia

award$6266$ - tradução para árabe

GLOBULAR CLUSTER
Messier Object 62; NGC 6266; Globular Cluster M62
  • 250px

award      
n. جائزة, مكافئة, حكم, قرار
booby prize         
  • wooden spoon]] is a common booby prize in sporting events
JOKE PRIZE GIVEN IN RECOGNITION OF A TERRIBLE PERFORMANCE OR LAST-PLACE FINISH
Mock award
n. الجائزة الأخيرة
MVP         
LIST OF SPORTS-RELATED PAGES WITH THE SAME OR SIMILAR NAMES
Most Valuable Player Award; MVP Award; Mvp; Most Valuable Players; MVP; M.V.P; M.V.P.; Most valuable player award; Most Valuable Player; Most valuable players
برمجة متعددة مع عدد متغير من المعالجات.

Definição

MVP
Most Valuable Professional [Additional explanations: bonus program] (Reference: MS)

Wikipédia

Messier 62

Messier 62 or M62, also known as NGC 6266, is a globular cluster of stars in the south of the equatorial constellation of Ophiuchus. It was discovered in 1771 by Charles Messier, then added to his catalogue eight years later.

M62 is about 21.5 kly from Earth and 5.5 kly from the Galactic Center. It is among the ten most massive and luminous globular clusters in the Milky Way, showing an integrated absolute magnitude of −9.18. It has an estimated mass of 1.22×106 M and a mass-to-light ratio of 2.05±0.04 in the core visible light band, the V band. It has a projected ellipticity of 0.01, meaning it is essentially spherical. The density profile of its member stars suggests it has not yet undergone core collapse. It has a core radius of 1.3 ly (0.39 pc), a half-mass radius of 9.6 ly (2.95 pc), and a half-light radius of 6.0 ly (1.83 pc). The stellar density at the core is 5.13 M per cubic parsec. It has a tidal radius of 59 ly (18.0 pc).

The cluster shows at least two distinct populations of stars, which most likely represent two separate episodes of star formation. Of the main sequence stars in the cluster, 79%±1% are from the first generation and 21%±1% from the second. The second is polluted by materials released by the first. In particular, abundances of helium, carbon, magnesium, aluminium, and sodium differ between these two.

Indications are this is an Oosterhoff type I, or "metal-rich" system. A 2010 study identified 245 variable stars in the cluster's field, of which 209 are RR Lyrae variables, four are Type II Cepheids, 25 are long period variables, and one is an eclipsing binary. The cluster may prove to be the galaxy's richest in terms of RR Lyrae variables. It has six binary millisecond pulsars, including one (COM6266B) that is displaying eclipsing behavior from gas streaming off its companion. There are multiple X-ray sources, including 50 within the half-mass radius. 47 blue straggler candidates have been identified, formed from the merger of two stars in a binary system, and these are preferentially concentrated near the core region.

It is hypothesized that this cluster may be host to an intermediate mass black hole (IMBH) – it is considered well-suited for searching for such an object. A brief study, before 2013, of the proper motion of stars within 17″ of the core did not require an IMBH to explain. However, simulations can not rule out one with a mass of a few thousand M. Based upon radial velocity measurements within an arcsecond of the core, Kiselev et al. (2008) made the claim of an IMBH, likewise with mass of (1–9)×103 M.