释义 |
Definition of soft landing in English: soft landingnoun 1A controlled landing of a spacecraft during which no serious damage is incurred. 软着陆 Example sentencesExamples - But even a soft landing can still shake up the crew, whose bodies must quickly adjust from zero-gravity to Earth's gravitational pull.
- As Hayabusa continued its flight down to the asteroid, it homed in on the Target Marker it dropped onto the surface of Itokawa before its first soft landing on November 20.
- After leaving orbit, the spherical compartment separated from the equipment module and descended through the atmosphere, but it was not designed for a soft landing.
- Each of the inexpensive tail cones correctly guides its container to its mark and opens the parachute so it makes a soft landing and is recovered by friendly forces.
- The Soviet Union concentrated on unmanned flights, Luna IX achieving a soft landing on the Moon in 1966.
- He may not have been into space himself, but having helped design re-entry modules to enable soft landings on Earth, Mars, Venus and other planets, he knows what he is talking about.
- A slow rendezvous, or even a soft landing, was totally out of the question: Icarus would be moving too fast by 1968 for a spacecraft to reach it and then reverse direction for a rendezvous.
- The Stardust spacecraft will return to Earth in January 2006, and its sample return capsule will make a soft landing at the U.S. Air Force Utah Test and Training Range.
- While he was flying nothing strange happened, but just moments, before he supposed to crush to the ground, the antigravitational forces come to work and Dimitri had a very soft landing.
- On January 31, 1966 the USSR launched Luna 9, which made mankind's first soft landing on the Moon.
- Foton doesn't rely only on parachutes for its soft landing: there is also a retro-rocket system that ignites as the package nears the ground.
- The pallet descended to a soft landing under almost two acres of parachutes.
- After being fully decelerated by the atmosphere, the capsule is designed to deploy a parachute for soft-landing.
- After being fully decelerated by the atmosphere, the Hayabusa capsule is designed to deploy a parachute for a soft landing in June 2007, in, as it stands now, south Australia.
- This mode had the advantage of simplicity but the disadvantage of requiring an enormous and expensive vehicle that could carry the fuel needed to make a soft landing on the Moon and relaunch from the lunar surface.
- Furthermore, the recovery of the experiment hardware after a nominal soft landing under parachute allows for its re-use in future missions.
- After its soft landing, the circular capsule opened like a flower, deploying its antennas, and began transmitting photographs and television images back to Earth
- Surveyor 1 made a successful soft landing in three centimeters of dust in the Ocean of Storms in June 1966.
- The Shuttle made a soft landing on the landing pad.
- 1.1 The slowing down of economic growth at an acceptable degree relative to inflation and unemployment.
经济增长软着陆(指伴随可以接受的通货膨胀及失业状况的经济增长率缓慢滑坡) Example sentencesExamples - The factors favoring this New Economy-style soft landing include a combination of good monetary and fiscal policy and a resilient economy.
- Xiao said he believed the economy would have a soft landing because the recent macro-economic index had demonstrated the effectiveness of austerity measures adopted this year.
- While the rapid acceleration in house prices may be on the wane, houses are not expected to lose their value and the property market is expected to have a soft landing.
- They're looking at where the market is going to go and I think it will be a soft landing.
- Bringing the real estate market to a soft landing will not only bring closure to a previous economic era but provide the stable foundation for a prosperous new one.
- Friends First director of investment strategy, economist Jim Power, said the slowdown was not surprising and indicated a soft landing for the economy.
- With the prudent approach taken by developers and lenders, we have secured a soft landing in the transition period.
- Many contractors now are guardedly optimistic that they will be able to manage a soft landing as the recession ends.
- The market will be coming off a five-year boom and will experience a soft landing next year.
- Calling on the government to moderate its spending policies next year, the Central Bank said such a move could make the difference ‘between a hard and a soft landing for the economy.’
- There is also a question about whether there could be a hard landing for the housing market alongside a soft landing for the economy as a whole.
- The bank report attributed the expected soft landing to the government's ‘balanced development strategy’ and macroeconomic control policies.
- The economy is now at a crucial stage where a dip in confidence or mishandling could turn a soft landing into a prolonged recession.
- The aim is to achieve what economists call a soft landing, turning that headlong rush into continued, sustainable growth.
- This is in line with the decline in house price inflation in recent months and is indicative of a soft landing rather than a house price crash.
- Although the economy is projected to come off that growth peak, commentators are predicting a soft landing, with growth slowing to just below trend.
- "Everything looks pretty rosy and still placed solidly for a soft landing, " JPMorgan economist Ben Simpfendorfer said.
- This economy is slowing far more than anybody anticipated, certainly more than Alan Greenspan anticipated, when he suggested that we had to slow down the economy to get a soft landing.
- Up until today every sign was pointing to the property market slowing down, heading for a relatively soft landing instead of the much-feared crash.
- We expect a soft landing over the rest of this year and into 2005 as the market returns to more normal sustainable levels.
Derivativesverb ˌsɒf(t)ˈland [no object](of a spacecraft) land in a controlled manner without incurring serious damage. the unmanned lunar rover has successfully soft-landed on the moon Example sentencesExamples - with object the first time humans have soft-landed a probe on a comet's surface
- The surface of Venus has been seen by a series of seven Soviet probes that soft-landed on Venus between 1985 and 1992.
- Twenty-five years ago, on July 20, 1976, NASA's Viking 1 lander soft-landed on the surface of Mars, becoming the first successful mission to land on the Red Planet, as well as the first successful American landing on another planet.
- The station successfully soft-landed on the Oceanus Procellarum, or ‘Ocean of Storms ‘on 3 February 1966.’
Definition of soft landing in US English: soft landingnounˌsôft ˈlandiNG A controlled landing of a spacecraft during which no serious damage is incurred. 软着陆 Example sentencesExamples - After leaving orbit, the spherical compartment separated from the equipment module and descended through the atmosphere, but it was not designed for a soft landing.
- After being fully decelerated by the atmosphere, the Hayabusa capsule is designed to deploy a parachute for a soft landing in June 2007, in, as it stands now, south Australia.
- On January 31, 1966 the USSR launched Luna 9, which made mankind's first soft landing on the Moon.
- Surveyor 1 made a successful soft landing in three centimeters of dust in the Ocean of Storms in June 1966.
- As Hayabusa continued its flight down to the asteroid, it homed in on the Target Marker it dropped onto the surface of Itokawa before its first soft landing on November 20.
- A slow rendezvous, or even a soft landing, was totally out of the question: Icarus would be moving too fast by 1968 for a spacecraft to reach it and then reverse direction for a rendezvous.
- Each of the inexpensive tail cones correctly guides its container to its mark and opens the parachute so it makes a soft landing and is recovered by friendly forces.
- Foton doesn't rely only on parachutes for its soft landing: there is also a retro-rocket system that ignites as the package nears the ground.
- The pallet descended to a soft landing under almost two acres of parachutes.
- The Soviet Union concentrated on unmanned flights, Luna IX achieving a soft landing on the Moon in 1966.
- After being fully decelerated by the atmosphere, the capsule is designed to deploy a parachute for soft-landing.
- Furthermore, the recovery of the experiment hardware after a nominal soft landing under parachute allows for its re-use in future missions.
- The Shuttle made a soft landing on the landing pad.
- The Stardust spacecraft will return to Earth in January 2006, and its sample return capsule will make a soft landing at the U.S. Air Force Utah Test and Training Range.
- He may not have been into space himself, but having helped design re-entry modules to enable soft landings on Earth, Mars, Venus and other planets, he knows what he is talking about.
- But even a soft landing can still shake up the crew, whose bodies must quickly adjust from zero-gravity to Earth's gravitational pull.
- This mode had the advantage of simplicity but the disadvantage of requiring an enormous and expensive vehicle that could carry the fuel needed to make a soft landing on the Moon and relaunch from the lunar surface.
- After its soft landing, the circular capsule opened like a flower, deploying its antennas, and began transmitting photographs and television images back to Earth
- While he was flying nothing strange happened, but just moments, before he supposed to crush to the ground, the antigravitational forces come to work and Dimitri had a very soft landing.
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