What's the difference between altimeter and asteroid?

Altimeter


Definition:

  • (n.) An instrument for taking altitudes, as a quadrant, sextant, etc.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The pilots had full aircraft control but were without use of altimeters.
  • (2) The new probe was built using improved electronics and batteries, and an extra radar altimeter, a device that will fire microwaves at the Arctic and Antarctic ice to reveal its thickness.
  • (3) Altitude was simulated by a system of gate valves and a vacuum pump, and measured by an altimeter.
  • (4) The next generation of smartwatches will employ additional technology including the accelerometer, magnetometer, gyroscope, compass, heart-rate monitor, altimeter and an ambient light sensor, to name a few.
  • (5) The Nabu tracks your motions like most fitness bands with an accelerometer and altimeter, but has two small OLED screens, one for notification icons and one scrolling text screen for messages, emails and other text notifications.
  • (6) CryoSat-2’s radar altimeter transmitted 7.5m measurements of Greenland and 61m of Antarctica during 2012, enabling glaciologists to work with a set of consistent measurements from a single instrument.
  • (7) The upgrade to the existing fitness tracking SmartBand monitors activity, steps and sleep using, like myriad other fitness bands, an accelerometer – but also has an altimeter for tracking stair climbs and hikes.

Asteroid


Definition:

  • (n.) A starlike body; esp. one of the numerous small planets whose orbits lie between those of Mars and Jupiter; -- called also planetoids and minor planets.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Lipase from Geotrichum asteroides appears more resistant to high temperatures and pH changes than the enzyme from Penicillium sp.
  • (2) This strain of the organism fits a pattern of susceptibility that is rare among N asteroides isolates in general and has been called the type 5 pattern, described as a resistance to broad spectrum cephalosporins, ciprofloxacin, and all aminoglycosides except amikacin.
  • (3) Within 18-24 h asteroid bodies consisting of an amorphous centre with fine radiating needle crystals were seen.
  • (4) The study deals with the phagocytosis of Nocardia asteroides (strain Weipheld) and the subsequent intracellular proliferation in peritoneal macrophage cells.
  • (5) Chalky white colonies, 0.5 to 1.0 mm in diameter, that were subsequently identified as N. asteroides grew well on the BCYE media.
  • (6) This must be regarded as an antigen-antibody precipitate corresponding to the "asteroid body" of previous authors.
  • (7) All six N. brasiliensis and six N. otitidis-caviarum were susceptible to gentamicin and minocycline, while all 15 N. asteroides were not.
  • (8) Microtubules and centrioles were not found in asteroid bodies, although a centriolar field was present in 1 giant cell close to the plasma membrane, completely unrelated to the asteroid body.
  • (9) Complications are unusual, but of the ones that do occur, infection, particularly with Nocardia asteroides, and fibrosis are the most common.
  • (10) The somewhat fortuitous isolation of Nocardia asteroides and its significance are discussed.
  • (11) The pathogenicity of Nocardia asteroides and other strains of different Nocardia species against chicken embryos was investigated.
  • (12) An acute suppurative abscess characterizes the lesions of N. asteroides.
  • (13) The inner solar system is filled with dust between the planets, called the zodiacal cloud, which starts out at the asteroid belt and slowly drifts towards the sun.
  • (14) Ominously, researchers have already discovered that there must be ten times as many potentially dangerous asteroids out there with sizes of the order of tens of metres as previously thought.
  • (15) With N. asteroides, the direct plating method gave equivocal results.
  • (16) The organism identified as Nocardia asteroides resisted to sulfonamide and cotrimoxazole but sensitive to chloramphenicaol and streptomycin in vitro.
  • (17) These findings and clinical observations suggest that inhibition of N. asteroides by neutrophils may be important in vivo.
  • (18) Evidence for the possible developmental pathway of the Schaumann body is provided by morphological changes within myelinoid figures intimately related to the asteroid body.
  • (19) Two and one half years later N. asteroides pneumonia recurred and resulted in death from respiratory failure.
  • (20) The official citation for the asteroid reads: "Iain M. Banks (1954-2013) was a Scottish writer best known for the Culture series of science fiction novels; he also wrote fiction as Iain Banks.

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