Keplerian - translation to russian
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

Keplerian - translation to russian

HYPOTHETICAL TYPE OF ARTIFICIAL SATELLITE THAT EMPLOYS A SOLAR SAIL
Artificial Lagrange point; Non-Keplerian orbit

Keplerian         
  • Kepler crater]] as photographed by [[Apollo 12]] in 1969
  • Monument to Tycho Brahe and Kepler in [[Prague]], Czech Republic
  • ''Epitome astronomiae copernicanae'', 1618
  • Karlova street in Old Town, [[Prague]] – house where Kepler lived. Now a museum [https://web.archive.org/web/20090910212442/http://www.keplervpraze.cz/en/]
  • Geometrical harmonies from ''[[Harmonice Mundi]]'' (1619)
  • Kepler's birthplace, in Weil der Stadt
  • General Wallenstein]]
  • Kepler's [[Platonic solid]] model of the [[Solar System]], from ''[[Mysterium Cosmographicum]]'' (1596)
  • Diagram of the [[geocentric]] trajectory of Mars through several periods of [[apparent retrograde motion]] in ''Astronomia Nova'' (1609)
  • A plate from ''Astronomiae Pars Optica'', illustrating the structure of [[eye]]s of various species
  • A statue of Kepler in [[Linz]]
  • A diagram illustrating the [[Kepler conjecture]] from ''Strena Seu de Nive Sexangula'' (1611)
  • Remnant of Kepler's Supernova [[SN 1604]]
  • Two pages from Kepler's ''Rudolphine Tables'' showing eclipses of the Sun and Moon
  • GDR]] stamp featuring Kepler
  • [[Tycho Brahe]]
  • As a child, Kepler witnessed the [[Great Comet of 1577]], which attracted the attention of astronomers across Europe.
GERMAN MATHEMATICIAN AND ASTRONOMER (1571–1630)
Keplerian; Johann Kepler; Johannes kepler; John Kepler; Kepplar; Johannes Kelper; Kepeler; Kepeller; Kanones Pueriles; Kepler; Johan Kepler; Christian Frisch; Ch. Frisch; Kepler, Johannes; Dioptrice

общая лексика

кеплеровский

кеплеровский      

• This is a true Keplerian orbit.

refractor         
  • The Apochromatic lens usually comprises three elements that bring light of three different frequencies to a common focus
  • The Yerkes Great refractor mounted at the 1893 World's Fair in Chicago; the tallest, longest, and biggest aperture refractor up to that time.
  • publisher=Auctor}}</ref>
  • This 12 inch refractor is mounted in a dome on a mount that matches the Earth's rotation
  • Astronaut trains with camera with large lens
  • Vienna University Observatory]]
  • Touristic telescope pointed to Matterhorn in Switzerland
  • The Greenwich 28-inch refractor is a popular tourist attraction in 21st century London
  • Alvan Clark polishes the big Yerkes achromatic objective lens, over 1 meter across, in 1896.
  • in}} refractor, at [[Yerkes Observatory]], the largest achromatic refractor ever put into astronomical use (photo taken on 6 May 1921, as Einstein was visiting)
TYPE OF OPTICAL TELESCOPE
Refractor; Refractor telescope; Refractive telescope; Galilean Telescope; Refracting Telescope; Galilean telescope; Keplerian telescope; Keplerian Telescope; Refractor Telescope; Kepler refractor; Galileo Telescope; Galileo's telescope; Refractory telescope

[ri'fræktə]

общая лексика

рефрактор

рефракторный

оптика

преломитель

нефтегазовая промышленность

преломляющий горизонт

преломляющая граница

преломляющая поверхность

Смотрите также

deep refractor; dipping refractor; extensive refractor; seismic refractor

существительное

общая лексика

телескоп-рефрактор

рефрактор

Definition

refracting telescope
¦ noun a telescope which uses a converging lens to collect the light.

Wikipedia

Statite

A statite (from the words static and satellite) is a hypothetical type of artificial satellite that employs a solar sail to continuously modify its orbit in ways that gravity alone would not allow. Typically, a statite would use the solar sail to "hover" in a location that would not otherwise be available as a stable geosynchronous orbit. Statites have been proposed that would remain in fixed locations high over Earth's poles, using reflected sunlight to counteract the gravity pulling them down. Statites might also employ their sails to change the shape or velocity of more conventional orbits, depending upon the purpose of the particular statite.

The concept of the statite was invented independently and at about the same time by Robert L. Forward (who coined the term "statite") and Colin McInnes, who used the term "halo orbit" (not to be confused with the type of halo orbit discovered by Robert Farquhar). Subsequently, the terms "non-Keplerian orbit" and "artificial Lagrange point" have been used as a generalization of the above terms.

No statites have been deployed to date, as solar sail technology remains in its infancy. NASA's cancelled Sunjammer solar sail mission had the stated objective of flying to an artificial Lagrange point near the Earth/Sun L1 point, to demonstrate the feasibility of the Geostorm geomagnetic storm warning mission concept proposed by NOAA's Patricia Mulligan.

What is the Russian for Keplerian? Translation of &#39Keplerian&#39 to Russian