(Askeri) YÖRÜNGE TEPE NOKTASI: Bir füze uçuş yolu veya uydunun yörüngesinde, kontrol eden cisim veya cisimlerin çekim sahası merkezinden en uzakta bulundukları nokta
The cult of the chief executive reached its apogee in the nineteen-nineties, a period when C.E.O.s seemed not so much to serve their companies as to embody them.
Position in elliptical orbit of moon where it is farthest from the earth Time period from one apogee to the next is the anomalistic month See also perigee
The point in an objects orbit farthest from the center of the body it is orbiting
The point farthest from the earth on the moon's orbit This term can be applied to any other body orbiting the earth, such as satellites It is the opposite of perigee
The point in the orbit of the Moon or other satellite where it is farthest from the Earth
The point in the orbit of the Moon or man-made satellite farthest from the Earth The point in the orbit of a satellite farthest from its companion body
That point on the path of an Earth-orbiting satellite most distant from the center of the Earth Compare perigee
In an orbit of a satellite orbiting the Earth, the point that is farthest from the gravitational center of the Earth
Similar to aphelion The point in an orbit when a body orbiting the Earth, (eg Moon or artificial satellite ) is farthest from the Earth (opposite of perigee)
apoapsis in Earth orbit; the point in its orbit where a satellite is at the greatest distance from the Earth
The point in the Moon's orbit where it is furthest from Earth At its apogee, the Moon is 406,700 kilometers from Earth (See also perigee )
The point in the Moon's orbit when it is farthest from the Earth (opposite of perigee)
The apogee of something such as a culture or a business is its highest or its greatest point. = peak. the most successful part of something = apex (apogée, from apogaeum, from , from apogaios , from apo- ( APOCALYPSE) + ge )
apoapsis in Earth orbit; the point in its orbit where a satellite is at the greatest distance from the Earth a final climactic stage; "their achievements stand as a culmination of centuries of development
[ 'a-p&-(")jE ] (noun.) 1594. Via Latin apogaeum and French apogée from Ancient Greek ἀπόγειον (“away from Earth”), from ἀπό (apo, “away”) + γῆ (gē, “Earth”).