What are the best words of science?

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In summary, a solar-powered internet connection is awesome. Some of the words people might use to describe science are parallax, lenticular, microscopy, spectrophotometer, quark, neutrino, and spaghettification. The word "virialization" is a recent favorite of mine. Barn, Joyce, and barn as a unit of area are also cool words. Colonoscopy, pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis, pseudopseudohypoparathyroidism, and taxicab metric are all real things. There are six words people might use to describe black holes: event horizon, accretion disk, singularity
  • #1
ryan albery
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Hey all, I'm just kicking back next to a lake with a line in the water- solar powered internet rocks. Tipping back a few beers towards the sunset, tipsy-haspy waiting for a strike... and wondered what peoples' favorite words of science might be?

Parallax for me, that's a cool word. Solid concept; easy to remember cause it rolls off the tongue like hopping across a creek. But saying quark... that word makes me go, 'hmmm, that's a stupid sounding word.'

I tried earnestly to describe what a superfluid was to a friend, but she couldn't stop laughing. The word will never be the same.

Condensate, that's a cool word too. There just went a flock of geese, on their migration south in a V formation cause they can feel the vorticis.
 
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  • #2
"Set" ... the hook.
 
  • #3
check the 'drag'...
 
  • #4
Will you be needing "Heat Transfer" ... in a skillet?
 
  • #5
Oh so many.

Lenticular.
Microscopy.
Spectrophotometer.
Quark.
Neutrino.
 
  • #6
Hmmm. Let me think. Recently I've taken a liking to the word virialization (as how it applies to dark matter and the virial theorem).

Spaghettification is always a good one. Ya' can't go wrong with that.

ryan albery said:
But saying quark... that word makes me go, 'hmmm, that's a stupid sounding word.'

I wonder if that that was the intended purpose. It could be. Murray Gell-Mann coined the term "quark" as applied to subatomic particles. But Murray Gell-Mann didn't invent the word itself, per-se. He got it from a literary work called Finnegans Wake by James Joyce.
Three quarks for Muster Mark!
Sure he hasn't got much of a bark
And sure any he has it's all beside the mark.​
If there's one thing to know about Finnegans Wake its that the book has a slew of "made up" words and phrases that nobody truly comprehends (outside the mind of Joyce, perhaps).
 
  • #7
Barn.
 
  • #8
Joyce-give or take, back and forth, up or down; strange and charmed sounds pretty cool.
 
  • #9
lisab said:
Barn.

I had to look that one up. I love it! :!)

A barn is a unit of area defined as 10-28 square meters.
The etymology of the unit barn is whimsical: during wartime research on the atomic bomb, American physicists at Purdue University who were deflecting neutrons off uranium nuclei (similar to Rutherford scattering) described the uranium nucleus as "big as a barn". Physicists working on the project adopted the name "barn" for a unit equal to 10−24 square centimetres. Initially they hoped the American slang name would obscure any reference to the study of nuclear structure; eventually, the word became a standard unit in particle physics.​
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barn_%28unit%29
 
  • #10
Abiogenesis
Spatiotemporal
 
  • #11
Abiogenesis is a cool word.

I also like these:
Equinox
Luminosity
Flux
Albedo
 
  • #12
I like the "mho" as the unit of conductance (inverse of the "ohm" as the unit of resistance).

And in particle physics we talk about "flavo(u)rs" of fundamental particles (electron / muon / tau for leptons, or up / strange / top for quarks).
 
  • #13
I've always been a fan of "positron".

And I heard "tachyon" somewhere, but I can't remember if it's a real thing or not, regardless, cool sounding.I had never heard of "barn" as it was referenced above. That is awesome.
 
  • #14
parsecs :biggrin:
 
  • #15
of the aforementioned I also like parallax, neutrino, positron, quark. Muon is pretty cool too.
 
  • #16
Colonoscopy, it just sounds cringe worthy by its own right.
 
  • #17
Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis.
 
  • #18
Pseudopseudohypoparathyroidism.

Yes, it's a real thing, and there's no typo! One of the longest words in the English language belongs to medical science. :biggrin:

(Oh, and although Enigman's word is even longer and also refers to a medical condition, it's often considered to be purposefully contrived to be as long as possible. It's basically just a verbose expression for silicosis. Whereas the word I gave was coined more "naturally").
 
  • #19
Input, output, feedback, signal/noise. All I think 20th century to-the-point coinages with an American sound.

Ones I hate are those coming from silly 'in' jokes. Amber mutants, Northern blots, Western blots, buckyballs. :yuck:

Mho is borderline.
 
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  • #21
"ooops"
 
  • #22
Evo said:
"ooops"
:rofl:
 
  • #23
I'd have to go with Neutrinos or Plutinos because they sound like cute cuddly things :thumbs:
 
  • #24
How about synthetic elements. e.g. Einsteinium
 
  • #25
how about

gluon
szyzygy
theorem 90

topology has some colourful names for things like
ham sandwich theorem
taxi cab metric
 
  • #26
IMO the best words are "the funding for your next project has been approved" :biggrin:
 
  • #27
Except for their name, lots of terms associated with black holes:
Event Horizon
Singularity
Accretion Disk
quasar
 
  • #28
Personal Statement. Statement of purpose :cry::frown::cry:
...and of course anatidaephobia
 
  • #29
Forgot this beautiful term: Fourier transform.
Just lovely. Sounds fancy, advanced and wicked, almost like lobotomy:

Now, my dear friend, I will perform a Fourier transform on you.
 
  • #30
I like the Franglais term "modelization". It sounds much more philosophically esoteric than just "setting up a model".
 
  • #31
Most Eigen+stuff.
Eigenfrequency
EigenKet
Eigendecomposition
Eigenduck.
 
  • #32
'Evaporation' is pretty cool. So is 'chronon'.

An anti-electron seems best termed a positron, but could you call an anti-proton a 'negatron'?

'Oooops': classic! Kinda like an erg... best pronounced 'eerrrgggg'.
 
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  • #33
bp_psy said:
Eigenduck.
:smile:
Now, we can't have such a fun term without a picture to go with it:

12016215533_11e803e865_o.jpg
 
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  • #34
What about that fermi surface known as The Third Zone Monster?
 
  • #35
I really like vector, sounds so cool =]
 

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