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isobar
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isobar

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The isobars around a low-pressure area or depression. In the northern hemisphere, winds blow anticlockwise around lows, approximately parallel to the isobars, and clockwise around highs. In the southern hemisphere, the winds blow in the opposite directions.

Line drawn on maps and weather charts linking all places with the same atmospheric pressure (usually measured in millibars). When used in weather forecasting, the distance between the isobars is an indication of the barometric gradient (the rate of change in pressure).

Where the isobars are close together, cyclonic weather is indicated, bringing strong winds and a depression, and where far apart anticyclonic, bringing calmer, settled conditions.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
The geostrophic wind blows parallel to isobars or height contours, with lower pressure/heights to the left (right) of the flow in the northern (southern) hemisphere, via the Buys-Ballot law.
Isobars, together with steam, water, or electric heaters allow even heat distribution over core and cavity surfaces for faster cycle times and uniform curing.
These stripes, running parallel to the shard's longest side, suggest ripples emanating from a pebble dropped into a pond or isobars on a weather map.
 
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