spaced antenna in a sentence
Examples
- A far more ambitious project than LIGO, the space-based Laser Interferometer Space Antenna, or LISA, is planned by the European Space Agency for launching a decade from now.
- New space-based detectors, like NASA's planned Laser Interferometer Space Antenna, should be able to detect gravity waves from these events that could help determine how black holes are formed.
- The Voyager 23-watt transmitters are on all the time, but deep space antennas on Earth tune in to their weak signals and record data only a few hours a day.
- Also, the Hubble space telescope is a joint project of NASA and ESA . Future ESA-NASA joint projects include the James Webb Space Telescope and the proposed Laser Interferometer Space Antenna.
- Other priorities include Laser Interferometer Space Antenna ( LISA ) for measuring gravitational waves and International X-ray Observatory for investigating black holes and the evolution of large scale structure in the universe.
- The "'Laser Interferometer Space Antenna "'( "'LISA "'), is a proposed European Space Agency mission designed to detect and accurately measure gravitational waves tiny ripples in the fabric of space-time from astronomical sources.
- In the late 1990s there was a joint project of Tbilaviamsheni and the Georgian Space Constructions'Institute to design and produce the space antenna-reflector which were successful used in their first attempt on Russian space station " MIR ".
- At Cavendish, Briggs joined with a small group to develop a mathematical procedure to deduce the horizontal motion of the ionosphere from radar signals detected on spaced antennas ( see " Journal of Atmospheric and Terrestrial Physics ", 56, 831, 1994 ).
- Called LISA, for Laser Interferometer Space Antenna, the aim of this NASA project to be launched in 2010 is to capture the signal from a gravity wave-- a " quake " in the fabric of space-time caused by some massive explosion like a supernova.
- In 2011, Dejan Stojkovic from the University at Buffalo and Jonas Mureika from the Loyola Marymount University described use of a Laser Interferometer Space Antenna system, intended to detect gravitational waves, to test the vanishing-dimension theory by detecting a maximum frequency after which gravitational waves can't be observed.