English to Malay Dictionary interstellar

interstellar

antara bintang
definition
adjective
interstellar travel
occurring or situated between stars.
example
More dark clouds of interstellar dust with intriguing shapes are seen silhouetted against the glowing 'interstellar' gas at the top right.
This propulsion concept could be used as the engine for an 'interstellar' probe.
The Sun and most of the Solar System are bathed in a huge cloud of 'interstellar' hydrogen.
We just had to plan for 'interstellar' travel if we were ever to encounter really interesting planets with intelligent beings.
Astronomers want to know how much of the dust in the Solar System is shed by comets and asteroids, and how much comes directly from 'interstellar' space.
The solar system formed 4.6 billion years ago from an 'interstellar' cloud of gas and dust.
The Earth sits in a stream of accelerated particles coming in from the Sun, 'interstellar' material, and galactic sources.
On the other hand, there are ways to reach other civilizations without 'interstellar' travel.
Some scientists tend to scoff at the idea of 'interstellar' travel because of the enormous distances that separate the stars.
Instead, they could be 'interstellar' rovers captured by the Sun's gravity.
When we've colonized space and mastered 'interstellar' travel, can there even be sci-fi anymore?
He added that 'interstellar' travel - between solar systems - was far less likely.
Orion is home to the famous Orion nebula, a glowing cloud of 'interstellar' gas where new stars are being born.
Come on, did you suspect that the smell of rotten eggs might one day lead to practical 'interstellar' space travel?
They may not exit the comet clouds and into proper 'interstellar' space for up to another 40,000 years after that.
Technologies based on resources drawn from all over the Solar System will make 'interstellar' trips affordable.
The greatest challenge of 'interstellar' travel is the enormous distances between stars.
Very few species had achieved 'interstellar' travel at this time in the Galaxy.
Most will crash into the Sun, strike another planet, or be flung by Jupiter's gravity into 'interstellar' space.
Its tails allows us to probe the physics of the interaction between an isolated neutron star and the 'interstellar' medium.
Credits: Google Translate
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