英:[ˌɡæliˈli(:)ən]
美:[ˌɡæləˈliən]
英:[ˌɡæliˈli(:)ən]
美:[ˌɡæləˈliən]
Noun
1. an inhabitant of Galilee (an epithet of Jesus Christ)
2. one of the four satellites of Jupiter that were discovered by Galileo
Adjective
1. of or relating to Galileo or his works
2. of or relating to Galilee or its inhabitants
Adjective (1)galileo + -an >entry 2
The first known use of Galilean was in 1638
1 Confounding chemistries aside, any astronaut photographing these Galilean glows — backgrounded by tempestuous Jupiter and the gas giant’s own kaleidoscopic auroras — would capture a memorable sight.
2 Mighty Jupiter turned up, with Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto, the four Galilean moons, in attendance.
3 Like many other Seahawks fans, quarterback Russell Wilson also had no idea what the Galilean transformation was until this week.
4 Galilean was third and Extra Hope finished fourth.
5 These Galilean moons were the first satellites found to orbit a planet other than Earth.
6 And you emerge from that journey into illumination: first through a gallery about children who survived, and ultimately into the Galilean landscape.
7 Tyson then responded via Twitter saying it was merely the Galilean transformation and that “in their reference frame, the ball went backwards. It’s not their fault they ran forward faster than the ball.’
8 Above the poem is an illustration of the Jovian system and its four Galilean moons, including Europa.
9 The Galilean understanding of the physical world as purely quantitative bars us from bringing together the qualitative and the quantitative in a single, unified picture of reality.
10 Not only is Io one of Jupiter's largest moons, but it is also one of the planet's Galilean moons, named as such because it was discovered by Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei in 1610.
11 We anticipate underground oceans of slush and water in these moons, a hint, before we have ever seen the surfaces of the Galilean satellites close up, that they may be very different one from another.
12 Slightly larger than Earth's moon, Io is the innermost of Jupiter's Galilean moons, which in addition to Io include Europa, Ganymede and Callisto.
13 The Galilean satellites of Jupiter are each almost as big as the planet Mercury.
14 Europa is one of Jupiter’s four large Galilean moons.
15 The moons were named by him the ‘Medician stars’, in honour of Cosimo, but are known to astronomers today as the Galilean satellites of Jupiter.
16 Einstein’s “relativity” was not a “new idea”: it was Einstein’s realization of the extensive validity of Galilean relativity.
17 Following Jesus is the core of being a disciple of Jesus, which also implies a personal relationship with Jesus, who was not merely a former Galilean boy scout.
18 New research shows auroras can also be seen on the Galilean moons of Jupiter: hypervolcanic Io, icy Europa, quirky Callisto and gigantic Ganymede.
19 They included the cragged terrain of the moon, stars invisible to the naked eye, and what would come to be known as the Galilean moons circling Jupiter.
20 Observations of Jupiter’s Galilean satellites—Europa, Callisto, Ganymede and Io—have long hinted at the presence of subsurface liquid layers.