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 Galileo [`gælə'lio]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 伽利略

  1. It didn't make much sense to Galileo to have different rules for motion on earth and in space.
    对伽利略来说,地球上和太空中有不同的运动法则是没有多大意义。
  2. Galileo demonstrated that objects of different weights fall at the same speed.
    伽利略证实不同重量的物体落下的速度相同。
  3. One of the four brightest satellites of Jupiter and the eighth in distance from the planet. Originally sighted by Galileo, it is one of the largest satellites in the solar system.
    木卫三木星四颗最亮的卫星之一,距木星的远近程度是第八位。最早伽利略观察到,是太阳系最大的卫星之一


galileo
[ noun ]
Italian astronomer and mathematician who was the first to use a telescope to study the stars; demonstrated that different weights descend at the same rate; perfected the refracting telescope that enabled him to make many discoveries (1564-1642)
<noun.person>


  1. "We have gained enough energy out of this celestial billiard shot to get the energy we need to make it all the say to Jupiter." _ Torrence Johnson, project scientist on NASA's Galileo space probe, after the robot explorer zoomed around Venus.
  2. The trajectory change is meant to aim Galileo for its flight past Venus in February.
  3. Along the way, Galileo will obtain fly-by data about the moon, Venus and at least one asteroid, Gaspra.
  4. The data could reveal whether the majority of these ions, which trigger colorful auroras near Earth's magnetic poles, come from the sun or Earth, said Lou Frank, chairman of Galileo's magnetic field working group.
  5. That started an eight-hour period of intensive photography and measurements, including a photographic search for lightning. Earlier Friday, Galileo studied dust particles and magnetic fields in space, and measured Venusian atmospheric temperatures.
  6. To pick up enough speed to reach Jupiter, for instance, Galileo must fly twice past Earth.
  7. "It's staggering to realize we've been neglecting our own satellite," said Torrence Johnson, Galileo's chief scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
  8. Galileo also will be the first spacecraft with modern instruments to study the far side of the moon, which is always pointed away from Earth, he added.
  9. The plutonium will not be installed in Galileo until the countdown begins, about six days before takeoff, Ms. Malone said.
  10. The plutonium is in two nuclear-powered generators that provide electricity for the Galileo spacecraft bound for Jupiter.
  11. In fiscal 1986 ended Sept. 30, Galileo had net income of $3 million, or $1.33 a share, on sales of $26.2 million.
  12. "Galileo is on its way to another world," Atlantis commander Don Williams said shortly after the 6,700-pound probe was gently ejected from the shuttle's cargo bay by springs.
  13. But Galileo itself will continue a wide orbit around the planet for 22 months, keeping track of changes in its weather for the first long-term study of an outer planet.
  14. The suit, filed in U.S. District Court, contends an accident during the launch of the nuclear-powered Galileo space probe could spread poisonous plutonium over a heavily populated area of Florida.
  15. Galileo was deployed Wednesday night about six hours after the space shuttle thundered into orbit.
  16. Also feeling better were scientists who have worked since 1978 on the Galileo project, surviving money problems that delayed the original 1982 launch date and the 1986 Challenger explosion that pushed the launch off three more years.
  17. The grenade went off Tuesday night in a home full of mourners on the outskirts of Santiago de Maria, about 70 miles east of the capital, said Defense Ministry spokesman Col. Jose Galileo Torres.
  18. Venus helped increase Galileo's speed by almost 5,000 mph, giving it enough energy to get to Jupiter.
  19. The computer centre for Galileo International will be in Denver, Colorado.
  20. Galileo's main antenna now is furled to protect it from the heat of the sun.
  21. The delay increased the probe's cost to $157 million from $133 million, said Benny Chin, Galileo probe project manager at NASA-Ames.
  22. The Galileo spacecraft makes a rendezvous with Earth on Saturday, using the planet's gravity like a slingshot to hurl it along on its six-year journey to the solar system's largest planet, Jupiter.
  23. The engineers believed an error in computer commands they sent to Galileo made the shutter snap when it wasn't supposed to, and they were "pretty certain there's nothing wrong with the computer or camera," he said.
  24. Mr. Cuddihy, a leading expert on radiation poisoning, says NASA underestimates the risk of a launch disaster or that Galileo may crash back to Earth, and the cost and difficulty of cleaning up an accident.
  25. Earlier, concerns about Galileo's nuclear power supply were left behind as Atlantis lifted off flawlessly on its mission to carry the $1.5 billion space probe into orbit on the first leg of its trip.
  26. So Galileo was launched with a much weaker Inertial Upper Stage booster after it was deployed by Atlantis' crew.
  27. The Galileo Data Centre in Swindon, England, will be one of the largest in Europe and will handle transactions such as ticket and car rental reservations.
  28. Thousands were at the Kennedy Space Center and nearby vantage points to watch the start of the 31st space shuttle mission, during which the astronauts will deploy Galileo and also conduct medical and other scientific experiments.
  29. The rocket is to boost Galileo toward Jupiter after the probe is released in orbit by Atlantis' astronauts.
  30. Efforts to explore deep space with the Hubble space telescope and the Galileo mission to Jupiter have been dogged by technical hitches, and last month the Dollars 980m Mars Observer was lost. The European Space Agency has also experienced setbacks.
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