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orbiting

/awr-bit/US // ˈɔr bɪt //UK // (ˈɔːbɪt) //

绕行,绕行的,绕行中的,绕行中

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the curved path, usually elliptical, described by a planet, satellite, spaceship, etc., around a celestial body, as the sun.
    • : the usual course of one's life or range of one's activities.
    • : the sphere of power or influence, as of a nation or person: a small nation in the Russian orbit.
    • : Physics. the path traced by an electron revolving around the nucleus of an atom.
    • : an orb or sphere.
    • : Anatomy. the bony cavity of the skull that contains the eye; eye socket.the eye.
    • : Zoology. the part surrounding the eye of a bird or insect.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to move or travel around in an orbital or elliptical path: The earth orbits the sun once every 365.25 days.
    • : to send into orbit, as a satellite.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to go or travel in an orbit.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • “This mission represents the initiation of a Dragon in orbit continuously, knocking on wood,” Shotwell said, according to The Verge.

  • The more planets a system has, the more circular their orbits, no matter where you look or what kind of star they orbit.

  • Axiom Space has signed three private astronauts to join former NASA astronaut Michael López-Alegría on Ax-1, the first private mission into orbit and to the International Space Station.

  • These were giants like Jupiter, hotter than Venus, tearing around their suns inside the orbit of Mercury.

  • Most studies figure this out by gauging the distance of an exoplanet from its host star and whether its orbit is not too close and not too far—the so-called Goldilocks zone.

  • The authors of the new study used data from the Cassini probe orbiting Saturn to measure the libration of Mimas.

  • Exoplanet astronomy—the search for planets orbiting other stars—has two major goals.

  • Obviously this method is most useful for very massive planets orbiting close to the host star.

  • As we learn about exoplanets orbiting distant stars, those two basic categories seem to hold.

  • Imagine, though, a Saturn-mass exoplanet with a Titan-sized moon orbiting its star within the habitable zone.

  • Dane rode out the orbiting in the Com-tech's seat, listening in for the first warning of danger—that they had been detected.

  • The ship swung down into the cloud layer; floating wisps of gray vapor streamed past the orbiting Cavour.

  • He might have time to collect all the orbiting cargo before he got dangerously close to spillthrough.

  • Later they had sent strange samples of the animal life of their planet, aboard orbiting missiles, to be studied by the Swifts.

  • The Cluster Queen was drawing up to the last orbiting crate.