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Corona |
Also found in: Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.03 sec. |
corona [kəˈrəʊnə] n pl -nas, -nae [-niː] 1. (Astronomy) a circle of light around a luminous body, usually the moon 2. (Astronomy) Also called aureole the outermost region of the sun's atmosphere, visible as a faint halo during a solar eclipse 3. (Fine Arts & Visual Arts / Architecture) Architect the flat vertical face of a cornice just above the soffit 4. something resembling a corona or halo 5. (Fine Arts & Visual Arts / Architecture) a circular chandelier suspended from the roof of a church 6. (Life Sciences & Allied Applications / Botany) Botany a. the trumpet-shaped part of the corolla of daffodils and similar plants; the crown b. a crown of leafy outgrowths from inside the petals of some flowers 7. (Life Sciences & Allied Applications / Anatomy) Anatomy a crownlike structure, such as the top of the head 8. (Life Sciences & Allied Applications / Zoology) Zoology the head or upper surface of an animal, such as the body of an echinoid or the disc and arms of a crinoid 9. (Law / Recreational Drugs) a long cigar with blunt ends 10. (Physics / General Physics) Physics short for corona discharge [from Latin: crown, from Greek korōne anything curved; related to Greek korōnis wreath, korax crow, Latin curvus curved]
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| Previously, astronomers could view coronas of stars beyond the sun only at X-ray wavelengths, a task that requires telescopes on spacecraft. PHOTO (Color) Janniche Raniolo and Amy Leonard enjoy a couple of cold Coronas at a bar in Chicago, which consumes $89 million in beer annually. Coronas were first used to help ink stick to thin film, known as web treating, then expanded to three-dimensional surface treating of small round items like bottles or syringes. |
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