ecliptic

英 [ɪ'klɪptɪk] 美[ɪ'klɪptɪk]
  • adj. 黄道的;(日或月)食的;蚀的
  • n. 黄道

英英释义


1. the great circle representing the apparent annual path of the sun; the plane of the Earth's orbit around the sun; makes an angle of about 23 degrees with the equator;
"all of the planets rotate the sun in approximately the same ecliptic"

实用场景例句


The obliquity of the ecliptic is the fundamental cause of the seasons.
黄道的倾角是季节的基本成因.

辞典例句

First, we know that the planets all orbit close to the earth's orbital plane, the ecliptic.
首先, 我们知道所有行星的轨道都很靠近地球的轨道平面――黄道面.

辞典例句

Five bright planets move among the stars near the ecliptic.
五颗明亮的行星在黄道附近的恒星当中移动.

互联网

Spread out plane of the ecliptic are Mercury, Venus, Mars, and Saturn.
沿着黄道从地面依次看去的是水星 、 金星 、 火星和土星.

互联网

The obliquity of ecliptic is the fundamental cause of the seasons.
黄道面与赤道面的夹角是黄道的倾角.

互联网

It is also coupled with ecliptic constellation, especially attractive.
再加上它也是黄道星座, 所以格外引人注目.

互联网

You'll find this file on a bed in Train Room 201 in the Ecliptic Express train.
你将在黄道特快的201房间的床上找至此文件.

互联网

Either of two points on the celestial sphere at which the ecliptic intersects the celestial equator.
在天球上天赤道与黄道相切的两点中的任一点.

互联网

Is ecliptic mother - in - law from which technology of advanced cotton spin acquires over there the nation?
黄道婆是从哪个民族那里学到先进棉纺织技术的?

互联网

Either of two diametrically opposite points at which the orbit of a planet intersects the ecliptic.
交点行星的轨道与黄道相交的完全相对的两点中任何一点.

互联网

双语例句


1. Its intersection with the celestial sphere will be a great circle -- the ecliptic.
它与天球相交处形成一个大圆 -- 黄道.

来自辞典例句

2. The obliquity of the ecliptic is the fundamental cause of the seasons.
黄道的倾角是季节的基本成因.

来自辞典例句

3. The zodiacal glow refers to the diffuse scattered sunlight on the ecliptic plane.
黄道光指的是在黄道平面上漫散射的太阳光.

来自辞典例句

4. The sun naturally appears to us to traverse the ecliptic in the same period of time.
在我们看来,太阳自然在相同时间内沿黄道运行一周.

来自辞典例句

5. The other point of intersection of equator and the ecliptic is called the Autumnal Equinox.
赤道和黄道的另一个相交点叫作秋分点.

来自辞典例句

英文词源


ecliptic (n.)
"the circle in the sky followed by the Sun," late 14c., from Medieval Latin ecliptica, from Late Latin (linea) ecliptica, from Greek ekliptikos "of an eclipse" (see eclipse (n.)). So called because eclipses happen only when the Moon is near the line. Related: Ecliptical.