Linguistics in science - eviltoast
  • mkwt@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Barns have physical dimensions of area, even though they are used to express probability distributions. So you can imagine “the broad side of a barn” as being so many square meters, but then scale it way way down to a particle physics equivalent, and you get the barn. Which apparently roughly represents “the broad side of a uranium nucleus”.

    • 2nd_Fermenter@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      I actually like the barn as a unit of measure.

      I am forever haunted by the decision decades ago to refer to two of the quarks as Top and Bottom. Maybe it was cute at the time. It did not age well.