「equator」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

equator

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  • Equator: A Journey (1988)
  • ocated between 10 and 40 degrees north of the equator, a general area that in 1990 was purported to
  • ase consists of a single point on the Earth's equator, above which the satellite sits at all times.
  • Being close to the equator, Adirampattinam enjoys Tropical wet and dry c
  • rdinate system which was designed to have its equator aligned with the supergalactic plane, a major
  • e of his travels brought him 20° south of the equator along the East African coast.
  • erturbations and the ellipticity of the Earth equator, an object placed in a GEO without any statio
  • In Following the Equator, an account of that travel published in 1897,
  • nt consists of three rings, the meridien, the equator, and the declination ring.
  • Chennai lies on the thermal equator and is also coastal, which prevents extreme v
  • he Earth decreases as one moves away from the equator, and because the Earth rotates in a counter c
  • d shipping in the coastal waters south of the Equator and throughout the United States zone of resp
  • lockader; but her consorts, the steam gunboat Equator and the tug Yadkin turned back.
  • Pseudobulweria is limited essentially by the Equator and the Tropic of Capricorn, and possibly alw
  • ta Ceti is positioned very near the celestial equator and is located about 0.74 degrees WNW of the
  • American Southwest were located close to the equator, and had a warm, monsoon-like climate with he
  • When the mean equator and equinox of J2000 are used to define a cel
  • natural philosopher, who intends to reach the equator and discover the shape of the world with a pe
  • and and nearby Baker Island just north of the Equator and east of Tarawa.
  • the distance from the spheroid center to the equator and b the distance from the center to the pol
  • ched on long-range missions, south across the Equator, and to the west across the Atlantic, operati
  • below the surface at the intersection of the Equator and the International Date Line.
  • and locations around the world, including the Equator and the South Pole.
  • minent constellation located on the celestial equator and visible throughout the world.
  • gives a list of parallels, starting with the equator, and proceeding north at intervals, chosen so
  • dible reports of snow-capped mountains on the Equator and had terrified the Masai warriors by remov
  • brous tissue that attaches to the lens at its equator and connects it to the ciliary body.
  • er align with the Earth's axis (except on the Equator) and must realign itself as the Earth rotates
  • wo places on Mars' surface, Viking 1 near the equator and Viking 2 far enough north to see frost in
  • worldwide, being in general smaller near the equator and larger towards the poles.
  • hey become a realistic cadre of the celestial equator and the constellations included between the t
  • is driven by the temperature contrast between equator and the poles.
  • n the disposition of the islands south of the equator and knew that they needed to do this to have
  • ,000 feet (1,800 m) of actual distance at the equator, and 3,000 feet (910 m) at latitude 60 degree
  • Fear River accompanied by CSS Yadkin and CSS Equator and inconclusively engaged six Federal blocka
  • n the ecliptic, the wobbling of the celestial equator and hence of the horizon at the latitude of E
  • Generally, water flows to the west at the equator, and then north (if in the northern hemispher
  • s western longitude, just between the Martian equator and the Valles Marineris system, just east of
  • shown the lunar mansions in their order, the equator and the degrees of the heavenly circumference
  • l Celestial Reference System (ICRS): the mean equator and equinox at J2000.0 are distinct from and
  • half shells with three joint welds around the equator, and a tube brazed (to beryllium or aluminium
  • es (395 nmi), inclined at 51.6 degrees to the equator and with a period of 97 minutes.
  • 2 November for the African coast north of the equator and 24 April 1668 for the rest of the world.
  • will occupy a position north of the celestial equator and the other will occupy the same degree sou
  • At all latitudes the celestial equator appears perfectly straight because the observ
  • chment points, cast into the acrylic sphere's equator, are not suitable for upside-down use.
  • Locations near the Equator are theoretically good sites for spaceports,
  • tica and New Zealand, and moved closer to the equator around 10 million years ago.
  • surface reach 130 K (−143 °C; −226 °F) at the equator, as heating is made more effective by Iapetus
  • decreasing density starting from the waist or equator as measured outwardly to the poles.
  • Nicholson is a good marker for the equator as it sits almost directly on the martian equ
  • At sea, the ship headed SSW and crossed the equator at 151 degrees and 50 minutes.
  • weather satellites orbit the Earth above the equator at altitudes of 35,880 km (22,300 miles).
  • orbit 35,800 kilometres (22,200 mi) above the equator at 99.2 degrees west longitude.
  • orbit 35,800 kilometres (22,200 mi) above the equator at 102.8 degrees west longitude.
  • Laurentia straddled on the equator at the time and the Rheic Ocean was to the so
  • ng occupies a plane parallel to the celestial equator, at right angles to the meridian.
  • ising over the Eastern Horizon at the Earth's equator at any given time.
  • orchids and companion plants from around the equator at elevations of 6,000 to 10,000 feet.
  • nd an orbital plane, ascending north over the Equator at 10:15 am local time (and 10:30 am local ti
  • ill be deployed in a circular orbit along the equator at an altitude of 8063km (medium earth orbit)
  • island, previously located just north of the equator, at about 175° W. It was discovered in 1858 a
  • 5 February: Crossed equator at 21.50 degrees West
  • When the Sun crosses the equator at both equinoxes, the Sun is moving at an an
  • ach a handle between two nearby points on the equator; because this manifold has Euler characterist
  • Despite being located close to the equator, Bujumbura is not nearly as warm as one might
  • arc length of one degree of latitude near the equator, but they took advantage of the opportunity t
  • outh to Tangier by 7 April; from there to the Equator by 5 May and in the rest of the world after 2
  • rate in a way similar to sailors crossing the equator, by raising a drink of spirits.
  • Objects near the equator can only be tracked for about an hour, but ob
  • Crossing the equator ceremony with "Davy Jones" (to left of Captai
  • The chemical equator concept was coined in 2008 when researchers f
  • Equator Crossing & Port Victoria, Seychelles: The Sch
  • equator crossing time.
  • (Sunderland crosses the Equator, February 19, 2010).
  • urements of the spin rate of this star at its equator have shown that it varies over time due to th
  • ng Degrees of Longitude upon Parallels of the Equator, ibid.
  • on the location of stars relative to Earth's equator if it were projected out to an infinite dista
  • nstellation lying just south of the celestial equator, immediately south of Orion.
  • It is located south of the planet's equator in the heavily cratered highlands of Terra Si
  • es is found over a wide region, from near the equator in Kenya, through the Middle East to Afghanis
  • Then, you go south of the equator, in Argentina, where you take down a trophy w
  • The westward surface flow at the equator in both oceans is part of the South Equatoria
  • of 166.5° to the ecliptic (165.3° to Saturn's equator), in a retrograde direction and with an eccen
  • hich the sun is at greatest distance from the equator) in order to determine the length of the trop
  • on of 151° to the ecliptic (153° to Jupiter's equator), in a retrograde direction and with an eccen
  • ey across the Andes of South America from the Equator in Ecuador to the tropic of Capricorn in Chil
  • The ecliptic and the celestial equator intersect within this constellation and in Vi
  • It is the point where the Earth's equator intersects the ecliptic.
  • kilometres (27,340 mi), without crossing the equator into the southern hemisphere.
  • ope considered the Earth to be divided by the equator into two hemispheres, the northern and southe
  • The rotation velocity at the equator is at least 223 km/s.
  • The minimum rotation velocity at the equator is 55 km/s.
  • The solar equator is the latitude immediately "under" the sun;
  • sult of the Earth's axial tilt, the celestial equator is inclined by 23.4° with respect to the ecli
  • nel, which has been discovered near the lunar equator, is an empty volcanic tube, measuring about t
  • e the coldest places on the planet, while the equator is the warmest (as on Earth).
  • East-West drift occurs because the equator is not perfectly circular, so satellites drif
  • Spanning the equator is a band of pearls and gemstones, with a sim
  • In two widely-used geodetic standards, the Equator is modeled as a circle whose radius is a whol
  • In either case, the length of the Equator is by definition exactly 2π times the given s
  • ) are impossible, the location of the thermal equator is not identical to that of the geographic eq
  • ll another definition states that the thermal equator is the latitude at which insolation is identi
  • The celestial equator is defined to be infinitely distant (since it
  • The celestial equator is a great circle on the imaginary celestial
  • Equator is a BBC television documentary series in thr
  • At its equator it is spinning at approximately 24% of the sp
  • When Summer Meridian passes through the equator, it will intersect and form morn virgin as a
  • d a position of 50 miles (80 km) north of the equator, it became the nearest a tropical cyclone has
  • reater than 70 degrees south of the celestial equator, it is the most southerly of the bright stars
  • North of the equator it blooms between January and April.
  • the closest major optical observatory to the equator lying at 8 degrees and 47.51 minutes north.
  • reeds on both coasts of the Americas from the equator northwards.
  • rboniferous tropical rainforests lay over the equator of Euramerica.
  • For comparison, the equator of the Sun requires just over 25 days for a c
  • ltair rotates rapidly, with a velocity at the equator of approximately 286 km/s.
  • n in the south, with its widest part near the equator of Arda.
  • ected rotational velocity (v sin i) along the equator of 390 km/s or greater.
  • le between the planet's orbital plane and the equator of the parent star.
  • that is equatorial (in the same plane as the equator of Mars), circular, and prograde (rotating ab
  • es (433 mi) and an inclination to the Earth's equator of 29 degrees.
  • first geometric procedure for determining the equator of a rotating planet from three observations
  • Equator of orbited body for satellites with small sem
  • Also, the magnetic equator of the Earth in this region is slightly to th
  • En route to Mombasa, the ship crossed the equator on 23 May.
  • It is located just south of the planet's equator on the relatively smooth Meridiani Planum (pl
  • lunar impact crater that is located near the equator, on the far side of the Moon.
  • It is located near the lunar equator on the far side of the Moon from the Earth.
  • rst and only operational patrol, crossing the Equator on 10 July, to target ships in the South Atla
  • y projecting the Earth's geographic poles and equator onto the celestial sphere.
  • The projection of the Earth's equator onto the celestial sphere is called the celes
  • h respect to another plane, such as the Sun's equator or even Jupiter's orbital plane, but the ecli
  • inguish whether a particular face is near the equator or a pole by examining the types of vertices
  • verging in an orb azure, with submeridian and equator or, topped with cross or.
  • words, it is a projection of the terrestrial equator out into space.
  • On 27 July they crossed the equator planning to go to Tahiti.
  • tionation as atmospheric water moves from the equator poleward which results in progressive depleti
  • Four solar cell paddles mounted near its equator recharged the storage batteries while in orbi
  • Equator Records or Equator Sound Studios was original
  • ers of the band Islands, which is also called Equator Records.
  • Hind Legs, was released on April 18, 2006 by Equator Records/EMI.
  • ffect is largest at the poles and weak at the equator results in sharp, relatively steady western b
  • "Boom, Boom, Boom, Boom!!" ( Equator RMX) - 6:20
  • use / solarium is usually integrated into the equator side of the building.
  • Equator Sound Studios, under direction from Worrod at
  • In 1960, Charles Worrod launched Equator Sound Studios Ltd. along with the Equator Sou
  • Fresh blue ice at Rhea's equator suggest impacts from deorbiting ring material
  • ge in a blue orb, with gold semi-meridian and equator, surmounted by a gold cross, the crown lined
  • nary satellites remain in one location at the equator taking weather images of the earth from that
  • For a specific point on the Earth's equator, TerraSAR X has a revisit cycle of 11 days.
  • rare events recorded by stations near Earth's equator that face the Sun.
  • located only about eight degrees north of the equator, the climate is tropical year round.
  • Being almost exactly on the celestial equator the star is visible everywhere in the world e
  • cecraft in orbits roughly parallel to Earth's equator, the effect is most pronounced with spacecraf
  • se than others, and the farther away from the equator the observer is situated, the greater the dif
  • the length of a short north-south line at the equator, the sphere that best approximates that part
  • At a few degrees north of the equator the perihelion/aphelion factor is balanced by
  • s not therefore depend upon which side of the equator the plant is growing.
  • ployment: "shellback" status for crossing the equator, the Order of the Ditch on two occasions for
  • s with a central deep groove diaphragm at the equator, thus limiting the rays to those close to the
  • bserver moves north (or south), the celestial equator tilts towards the southern (or northern) hori
  • s one and half degree away from the celestial equator to the south.
  • is forecasting tropical cyclones south of the equator to the 25th parallel south, and between the 1
  • international warnings for the area from the Equator to 10°S between 90°E and 125°E.
  • icus ranges from the Galapagos Islands at the equator, to Cape Horn at 55º South: Chile, Ecuador, P
  • overtake the Lammermuir before it crossed the Equator to transfer the chest at sea, which he did.
  • long cable connecting a point on or near the equator to an object, possibly a captured asteroid, i
  • 1970 deployment when she sailed south of the equator to Australia and New Zealand, where she joine
  • n extended out to include the region from the Equator to 10°S between 125°E and 141°E.
  • satellites that dip sufficiently south of the equator to be usable for several hours daily.
  • shallower and weaker.It flows south from the equator to the west wind drift.
  • Even though biodiversity declines from the equator to the poles in terrestrial ecosystems, this
  • 7, 2007, the Sun passed the Uranian celestial equator to the North and in 2029 the North Pole of Ur
  • sia to Manila, Philippines, down south of the equator to New Zealand and Papua New Guinea and into
  • +-5 deg at most at equator to approx.
  • misphere will explode progressively, from the equator toward the opposite pole.
  • As much of Brazil is close to the equator, traditional rules of thumb brand most of the
  • sun-synchronous orbit might ascend across the equator twelve times a day each time at approximately
  • he inclination of the Earth's orbit the solar equator varies during the year, from the Tropic of Ca
  • An observer standing on the Earth's equator visualizes the celestial equator as a semicir
  • le Star disappeared beyond the horizon as the equator was crossed, rendering this method useless in
  • Strong flow from across the equator was drawn into the circulation of Roger, init
  • though low in the sky, from just north of the Equator when near its daily arc's highest point, the
  • The galaxy is located near the galactic equator where dust obscuration makes it a difficult o
  • planetary precession, along the instantaneous equator, which results in a rotation of the ecliptic
  • The geographical distribution is around the equator with 70% of the total 2.5 billion people livi
  • 768 pixels wide (1.25 km/pixel at the Earth's equator), with selected coverage at higher resolution
  • from regions as diverse as the Arctic and the Equator, with each display occupying a floor climatic
  • ly 37,000 km (22,300 miles) above the Earth's equator with the characteristic that, from a fixed ob
  • on of 147° to the ecliptic (147° to Jupiter's equator) with an eccentricity of 0.2441.
  • (At the poles, though, the celestial equator would be parallel to the horizon.)