orbit

(redirected from orbits)
Also found in: Dictionary, Thesaurus, Medical, Idioms.
Related to orbits: Priceline

orbit

1. Astronomy the curved path, usually elliptical, followed by a planet, satellite, comet, etc., in its motion around another celestial body under the influence of gravitation
2. Anatomy the bony cavity containing the eyeball
3. Zoology
a. the skin surrounding the eye of a bird
b. the hollow in which lies the eye or eyestalk of an insect or other arthropod
4. Physics the path of an electron in its motion around the nucleus of an atom
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

orbit

(or -bit) The path followed by a celestial object or an artificial satellite or spaceprobe that is moving in a gravitational field. For a single object moving freely in the gravitational field of a massive body the orbit is a conic section, in actuality either elliptical or hyperbolic. Closed (repeated) orbits are elliptical, most planetary orbits being almost circular. A hyperbolic orbit results in the object escaping from the vicinity of a massive body. See also Kepler's laws; orbital elements.
Collins Dictionary of Astronomy © Market House Books Ltd, 2006

Orbit

(religion, spiritualism, and occult)

An orbit is the path in space that one heavenly body makes in its movement around another heavenly body. The Moon, for example, makes an orbit around Earth, while Earth and the other planets make orbits around the Sun. The technical name for the orbiting body is satellite. The orbited body is called a primary. Because primaries are also in motion, the orbits described by satellites are elliptical rather than circular.

Satellites form stable orbits by counterbalancing two forces—their movement away from the primary and the force of gravity drawing them back toward the primary. In other words, in the absence of gravity a satellite would move in a straight line, which would soon take it away from its primary; in the absence of satellite motion, gravity would draw a satellite and its primary together until they collided.

Sources:

Robinson, J. Hedley, and James Muirden. Astronomy Data Book. 2d ed. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1979.
Smoluchowski, Roman. The Solar System: The Sun, Planets, and Life. New York: Scientific American Books, 1983.
The Astrology Book, Second Edition © 2003 Visible Ink Press®. All rights reserved.

orbit

[′ȯr·bət]
(anatomy)
The bony cavity in the lateral front of the skull beneath the frontal bone which contains the eyeball. Also known as eye socket.
(mathematics)
Let G be a group which operates on a set S ; the orbit of an element s of S under G is the subset of S consisting of all elements gs where g is in G.
(oceanography)
The path of a water particle affected by wave motion; it is almost circular in deep-water waves and almost elliptical in shallow-water waves.
(physics)
Any closed path followed by a particle or body, such as the orbit of a celestial body under the influence of gravity, the elliptical path followed by electrons in the Bohr theory, or the paths followed by particles in a circular particle accelerator.
More generally, any path followed by a particle, such as helical paths of particles in a magnetic field, or the parabolic path of a comet.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Orbit

A Scheme compiler.

["Orbit: An Optimising Compiler for Scheme", D.A. Kranz et al, SIGPLAN Notices 21(7):281-292 (Jul 1986)].
This article is provided by FOLDOC - Free Online Dictionary of Computing (foldoc.org)
References in periodicals archive ?
If more objects turn out to have non-coplanar orbits around their stars, then it'll be a new challenge to observe them and to figure out how that happened.
Accounting for 7 percent of millennial parents, this is the smallest -- but most distinctive -- of the five orbits we identified.
Earth and its siblings travel along nearly circular orbits in almost the same plane.
NEW YORK: Are these planets without orbits? Astronomers have found 10 potential planets as massive as Jupiter wandering through a slice of the Milky Way, following either very wide orbits or no orbit at all.
Satellites that orbit close to a planet, like Earth's moon, follow a roughly circular path around the planet's equator, moving in the same direction in which the planet spins.
The solar system's nine planets follow orbits around the sun that are shaped like ellipses, or stretched-out circles.
First, a low symmetry reduces the probability of quasi-trapped orbits by inducing mode mixing of the neutrons so that neutrons reach the boundary defined by their kinetic and potential energy.
Payload capability: 6,100 pounds in geosynchronous orbit.
The next year, John Glenn becomes the first American to orbit the Earth.
According to the Technical Assessment, one disposal technique involves shifting space debris from current orbits into "disposal orbits," where they do not pose a threat to functional spacecraft.