nebula

[neb-yuh-luh] /ˈnɛb yə lə/
noun, plural nebulae
[neb-yuh-lee, -lahy] /ˈnɛb yəˌli, -ˌlaɪ/ (Show IPA),
nebulas.
1.
Astronomy.
  1. Also called diffuse nebula. a cloud of interstellar gas and dust.
  2. (formerly) any celestial object that appears nebulous, hazy, or fuzzy, and extended in a telescope view.
2.
Pathology.
  1. a faint opacity in the cornea.
  2. cloudiness in the urine.
3.
any liquid medication prepared for use as a spray.
Origin
1655-65; < Latin: a mist, vapor, cloud; akin to Greek nephélē cloud, German Nebel fog, haze
Related forms
nebular, adjective
nonnebular, adjective
prenebular, adjective
Examples from the web for nebula
  • Yet it is unlikely that the software cloud will end up as a vast nebula of thousands of specialised services.
  • Now researchers have caught one of these shining suns in the act of nebula formation.
  • nebula isn't an absent-minded professor, he's an absent professor.
  • Some astronomers think that a gravitational or magnetic disturbance causes the nebula to collapse.
  • The nebula was chosen last year for observation in an online vote by students, teachers and amateur and professional astronomers.
  • And the heavier oxygen from a natural process that left more of the light isotope in the part of the nebula that made the sun.
  • These stars bombard everything around them with intense radiation, making the dust and gas in the nebula glow.
  • Note the beautiful sculpted shock wave at the left end of the jet as it plows into the dense material in the nebula itself.
  • For reasons still mysterious, the nebula coalesced, becoming rocky and lumpy.
  • The flood of light and wind from the stars sculpt the surrounding nebula into those odd shapes.
British Dictionary definitions for nebula

nebula

/ˈnɛbjʊlə/
noun (pl) -lae (-ˌliː), -las
1.
(astronomy) a diffuse cloud of particles and gases (mainly hydrogen) that is visible either as a hazy patch of light (either an emission or a reflection nebula) or an irregular dark region against a brighter background (dark nebula) Compare planetary nebula
2.
(pathol)
  1. opacity of the cornea
  2. cloudiness of the urine
3.
any substance for use in an atomizer spray
Derived Forms
nebular, adjective
Word Origin
C17: from Latin: mist, cloud; related to Greek nephétē cloud, Old High German nebul cloud, Old Norse njól night
Word Origin and History for nebula
n.

early 15c., nebule "a cloud, mist," from Latin nebula "mist, vapor, fog, smoke, exhalation," figuratively "darkness, obscurity," from PIE *nebh- "cloud" (cf. Sanskrit nabhas- "vapor, cloud, mists, fog, sky;" Greek nephele, nephos "cloud;" German nebel "fog;" Old English nifol "dark, gloomy;" Welsh niwl "cloud, fog;" Slavic nebo).

Re-borrowed from Latin 1660s in sense of "cataracts in the eye;" astronomical meaning "cloud-like patch in the night sky" first recorded c.1730. As early as Hershel (1802) astronomers realized that some nebulae were star clusters, but certain distinction of relatively nearby cosmic gas clouds from distant galaxies was not made until 1920s, using the new 100-inch Mt. Wilson telescope.

nebula in Medicine

nebula neb·u·la (něb'yə-lə)
n. pl. neb·u·las or neb·u·lae (-lē')

  1. A faint, foglike opacity of the cornea.

  2. A class of oily preparations for use in a nebulizer.

nebula in Science
nebula
  (něb'yə-lə)   
Plural nebulae (něb'yə-lē') or nebulas
A visible, thinly spread cloud of interstellar gas and dust. Some nebulae are the remnants of a supernova explosion, others are gravity-induced condensations of the gases in the interstellar medium which in certain cases may become a site for the formation of new stars. The term was formerly used of any hazy, seemingly cloudlike object, including what are now recognized as other galaxies beyond the Milky Way; it is restricted now to actual clouds of gas and dust within our own galaxy. ◇ Nebulae are generally classified as bright or dark. Among the bright nebulae are cold clouds that reflect light from nearby stars (reflection nebulae) and hot, ionized clouds that glow with their own light (emission nebulae). Dark nebulae—cold clouds that absorb the passing light from background stars—are called absorption nebulae. See more at star.
nebula in Culture
nebula [(neb-yuh-luh)]

plur. nebulae

In astronomy, a hazy patch of light visible in the sky. Some nebulae are clouds of gas within the Milky Way; others are distant galaxies. (See photo, next page.)

nebula in Technology

An early business-oriented language from ICL for the Ferranti Orion computer.
["NEBULA - A Programming Language for Data Processing", T.G. Braunholtz et al, Computer J 4(3):197-201 (1961)].
(1994-11-29)