Examples of using Sun-like in English and their translations into Vietnamese
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The 2005 discovery of a giant planet with a massive core orbiting the sun-like star HD 149026 is an example of an exoplanet that helped strengthen the case for core accretion.
is one of brightest and closest examples of a planetary nebula, a gas cloud created at the end of the life of a Sun-like star.
Upsilon Andromedae c(υ Andromedae c, abbreviated Upsilon And c, υ And c), formally named Samh/ˈsɑːm/(a homophone with the star Salm), is an extrasolar planet orbiting the Sun-like star Upsilon Andromedae A every 241.3 days.
And doing this for 14 billion years, we end up with this picture, which is a very important graph, showing relative abundances of chemical elements in sun-like stars and in the interstellar medium.
is a yellow subgiant, a Sun-like star that is ceasing fusing hydrogen in its core.
It stands on the summit of the Haleakalā volcano in Hawaii.[1] Their first discovery of a Jupiter-sized planet orbiting a Sun-like star 600 light-years from Earth in the constellation Corona Borealis- XO-1b- was reported May 16, 2006 on Newswise.
with large laces coming from the openings, and a pair of hot pink and dark red stockings with a yellow sun-like motif on them a pattern seen other times in the One Piece world.
likely rocky, orbiting the Sun-like star Kepler-69,
in the Perseus constellation, two researchers from UC Berkeley and the Harvard-Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory have concluded all Sun-like stars are probably born with a companion.
how these crystals may have been created, by using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope to observe the growing pains of a young, sun-like star.
On rotational periods of 20 Sun-like stars, measured by the effects of moving starspots on light curves, suggests that these approximately 4 Gyr old stars spin
Currently, we can describe the death processes common to many Sun-like stars, but we cannot explain why or exactly how they happen,” said co-author Sofia Ramstedt of Sweden's
Currently, we can describe the death processes common to many Sun-like stars, but we cannot explain why or exactly how they happen,” said Sofia Ramstedt of Uppsala University in Sweden,
been estimated at well over 500.[9] The ages and prevalence of Sun-like stars contained within the cluster had led astronomers to consider M67 as the possible parent cluster of the Sun.[10] However, computer simulations have suggested that
Currently, we can describe the death processes common to many Sun-like stars, but we cannot explain why or exactly how they happen,” said co-author Sofia Ramstedt from Uppsala University,
Currently, we can describe the death processes common to many Sun-like stars, but we cannot explain why or exactly how they happen," said co-author Sofia Ramstedt from Uppsala University in Sweden.
Currently, we can describe the death processes common to many Sun-like stars, but we cannot explain why or exactly how they happen,” said Sofia Ramstedt, study co-author from Uppsala University in Sweden.
Cancri c(abbreviated 55 Cnc c), formally named Brahe(pronounced/ˈbrɑːhiː/ or/ˈbrɑː/), is an extrasolar planet in an eccentric orbit around the Sun-like star 55 Cancri A,
69 light-years away in the constellation of Cygnus.[1] The planet was discovered orbiting the Sun-like star 16 Cygni B,
The signal from HD 164595 is intriguing, because it comes from the vicinity of a sun-like star, and if it's artificial, its strength is great enough