prograde การใช้
- Retrograde satellites can be found further from the planet than prograde ones.
- At greater depths the particle motion becomes " prograde ".
- The boundary for the semimajor axis is surprisingly sharp for the prograde satellites.
- Pallas's rotation appears to be prograde.
- For prograde rotation, the formula relating the lengths of the sidereal and solar days is
- The diagram illustrates the Albiorigian orbit in relation to other prograde irregular satellites of Saturn.
- With prograde metamorphism cummingtonite and grunerite morph to members of the olivine and pyroxene series.
- Metamorphism produced with increasing pressure and temperature conditions is known as " prograde metamorphism ".
- Closer to the poles, the winds shift to a prograde direction, flowing with Uranus's rotation.
- Retrograde ( backward ) and prograde ( forward ) are observed as though the stars revolve around the Earth.
- When a planet travels eastward in relation to the stars, it is called " prograde ".
- Migmatites form under extreme temperature conditions during prograde metamorphism, where partial melting occurs in pre-existing rocks.
- As in Figure 2, the result is the sum of a prograde and a retrograde circular polarized wave.
- For the prograde satellites the acceleration points outward and for the retrograde it points inward, stabilising the satellite.
- Also the rotations of most planets are prograde, with the exceptions of Venus and Uranus, which have retrograde rotations.
- Compare : Image : Sidereal day ( prograde ) . png with the thumbnail of the same image at Sidereal day.
- Twenty-four of Saturn's moons are " regular satellites "; they have prograde orbits not greatly Saturn.
- A "'triple conjunction "'is an retrograde at the second conjunction and again prograde at the third conjunction.
- Because Saturn has a more even mix of retrograde / prograde moons, however, the underlying causes appear to be more complex.
- The earliest recorded use of " prograde " was in the early 18th century, although the term is now less common.
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