apogee

     

In astronomy, an apsis, plural apsies (pronounced /ˈæpsɪdɪːz/) is the point of greatest or least distance of the elliptical orbit of an astronomical object from its center of attraction, which is generally the center of mass of the system. The point of closest approach is called the periapsis or pericentre and the point of farthest excursion is called the apoapsis (Greek από, from, which becomes απ before a vowel, and αφ before rough breathing), apocentre or apapsis (the latter term, although etymologically more correct, is much less used). A straight line drawn through the periapsis and apoapsis is the line of apsides. This is the major axis of the ellipse, the line through the longest part of the ellipse.

Trivia about apogee

  • This is defined as the position in a satellite's orbit when it's most distant from the Earth
  • The moon's farthest point from the Earth is referred to by this term
  • (Jimmy of the Clue Crew watches a juggler pracice with clubs at Circus Center in San Francisco, CA.) It's time to throw the next club when the previous club reaches this point, also an astronomy term for the greatest distance from Earth
  • It's the point farthest from the Earth in the orbit of a body traveling around it
  • It sounds like it's sorry, but this term refers to the orbital point where a celestial body is farthest from the Earth

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