deorbit
English
Verb
deorbit (third-person singular simple present deorbits, present participle deorbiting, simple past and past participle deorbited)
- (transitive) To cause to leave orbit.
- 1996, DIANE Publishing Company, Intelligence Threat Handbook
- The principal improvements in the systems are the ability to return film canisters without deorbiting the spacecraft, and the extension of orbital ...
- 1998, Curtis Peebles, High Frontier: The U.S. Air Force & the Military Space Program - Page 59
- First, an orbiting weapon required elaborate spacecraft systems, such as retro-rockets to deorbit it, others to guide it, and still others to arm it.
- 2007, U.S. Government, Proposed fiscal year 2008 budget request for the Department of the Interior ... - Page 83
- ... process will be initiated and over approximately one year the satellites will be maneuvered into an orbit that will eventually safely deorbit them.
- 1996, DIANE Publishing Company, Intelligence Threat Handbook
- (intransitive) Of an orbiting object, such as a satellite, to leave orbit.
- 1986, Gloria W. Heath, ed., Space Safety and Rescue, 1984-1985: Proceedings of Symposia, page 62
- The Gemini emergency occurred when Gemini 8 deorbited and landed in the Northern Pacific 1000 miles south of Japan.
- 2001, Rex Hall, David Shayler, The Rocket Men: Vostok & Voskhod, the First Soviet Manned Spaceflights, page 192
- Vostok 3 deorbited first, at 09.24 MT on 15 August, followed six minutes later by Vostok 4.
- 2002, Dan Simmons, "The End of Gravity", in Worlds Enough & Time: Five Tales of Speculative Fiction, page 251
- Viktor is a friend of mine," she says. "He tells me that he has had strange dreams since Mir deorbited."
- 1986, Gloria W. Heath, ed., Space Safety and Rescue, 1984-1985: Proceedings of Symposia, page 62
Derived terms
Translations
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