Meaning Trajectory
What does Trajectory mean? Here you find 55 meanings of the word Trajectory. You can also add a definition of Trajectory yourself

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Trajectory


The height and angle the ball travels when struck. (Great players are able to control the trajectory of their shots).
Source: pga.com

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Trajectory


"path described by a body moving under the influence of given forces," 1690s, from Modern Latin trajectorium, from trajectorius "of or pertaining to throwing across," from Latin tr [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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Trajectory


vehicle or car carried by an overhead carrier.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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Trajectory


(Or path.) A curve in space tracing the points successively occupied by a particle in motion. At any given instant the velocity vector of the particle is tangent to the trajectory. In steady- state fl [..]
Source: glossary.ametsoc.org

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Trajectory


The flight path of the ball through the air.
Source: thaigerlinegolf.com

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Trajectory


The height and angle the ball travels after being struck.
Source: skrill.com

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Trajectory


The path the ball takes through the air
Source: golfonline.co.uk

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Trajectory


The flight path of the ball. TRIPLE BOGEY
Source: golfcoursesguide.org

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Trajectory


   The height and angle the ball travels when struck.
Source: manesargolfclub.com

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Trajectory


Physics term that relates to golf clubs and balls. Refers to the path followed by an object (in this case a golf ball) after it encounters a force that puts it into action. Usually the path is curved [..]
Source: golfballs.com

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Trajectory


the angle at which the ball comes off the clubhead. For today’s low spin balls higher trajectories are more desirable in drivers. Yet many game improvement irons tend to launch at higher angles which [..]
Source: golf-club-revue.com

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Trajectory


Trajectory refers to the launch angle and "shape" of the flight of the golf ball. Regardless of the type of club, the trajectory of the golf ball can indicate whether or not the golf club's loft and shaft flex are properly matched to the golfer's swing speed.
Source: bayonetblackhorse.com

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Trajectory


The flight path of the golf ball
Source: playthinkinggolf.com

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Trajectory


The flight path of the ball.
Source: jaysgolf.com

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Trajectory


The height and angle the ball travels when struck.
Source: hassan2golftrophy.com

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Trajectory


(law of)    The further a ball travels along an inclined trajectory, the higher the resulting altitude the ball will reach.  A ball struck with a seven iron and sent twenty yards will not attain the same height as when the seven-iron sends the ball thirty yards.
Source: factcheckgolf.org

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Trajectory


The flight path of the ball.
Source: aboutgolfschools.org

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Trajectory


The height and angle the golf ball travels when struck.
Source: golfing2u.com

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Trajectory


The shape and height of a shot.
Source: ralphmaltby.com

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Trajectory


The angle and 'shape' of the flight of the golf ball. Optimal ball trajectory is usually described as steady and climbing to an apex, then falling off quickly with a small percentage of the total distance being roll. Ball trajectory that curves upward and/or peaks late in flight (ballooning) and creates less roll, may indicate that the sh [..]
Source: golfclubseurope.com

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Trajectory


Path the ball takes through the air. Usually arc shaped on good shots.
Source: amgolfscores.com

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Trajectory


The shape and height of a shot in relation to its direction.
Source: blog.hirekogolf.com

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Trajectory


n. The path described by a projectile moving under given forces.
Source: easypacelearning.com

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Trajectory


The flight path of the ball.
Source: 1st-golf-info.com

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Trajectory


The angle at which a projectile has been launched. Usually the most effective trajectory for a projectile, to gain the greatest distance, is 45 degrees.
Source: getfittogolf.com

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Trajectory


The trajectory of the golf ball refers to the height and angle that it travels through the air.
Source: theukrules.co.uk

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Trajectory


The height and angle the ball travels when struck.
Source: lallameryemgolfcup.com

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Trajectory


noun. the chain of positions through which a item passes over time during a motion.
Source: psychologydictionary.org

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Trajectory


The curved path of a projectile from muzzle to target.
Source: saami.org

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Trajectory


Trajectory = positions + velocities.
Source: drugdesign.com

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Trajectory


The trajectory of a system refers to the sequential states of that system, or its path, across its phase space, originating at the point of its initial condition within the phase space. See also orbit [..]
Source: complexityexplorer.org

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Trajectory


   the path that a body makes as it moves through space. transitive property:
Source: depts.gpc.edu

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Trajectory


(n) the path followed by an object moving through space
Source: beedictionary.com

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Trajectory


The arc described by a projectile traveling from the muzzle to the point of impact.
Source: genitron.com

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Trajectory


Trajectory is defined as the curve which a body follows as it moves through space.  The path is curved because the horizontal velocity is constant and the vertical velocity due to gravity is changing. [..]
Source: rsmck.com

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Trajectory


Straight or curved line or edge along which you sweep a face or an edge.
Source: help.spaceclaim.com

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Trajectory


Used in meteorology to denote the path taken by any particular particle of air when moving over Earth's surface. In gunnery, is the path of the projectile from gun muzzle to the surface of Earth, [..]
Source: crewtraffic.com

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Trajectory


In systems thinking, this refers to the series of successive states though which the system proceeds oevr time. It may be said to represent the long-term behavior of the system.
Source: archaeologyinfo.com

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Trajectory


The arc described by a projectile (or a load of shot) after it exits the muzzle of a firearm. Falling objects accelerate downwards at a rate of 32 feet per second, per second. The faster a projectile [..]
Source: hallowellco.com

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Trajectory


The curve or a path that an object makes while in space. Trajectory is usually a set of points on the path taken [Sacramento Sinica; v47; 599-606; 2004.]
Source: shsu.edu

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Trajectory


The curved path followed by a projectile after it leaves the muzzle.
Source: crosman.com

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Trajectory


The flight path of a projectile, missile, rocket or satellite.
Source: thespacerace.com

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Trajectory


The path or route than an object takes.
Source: travelwayfinding.com

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Trajectory


 same as well path, either actual or planned; the traverse that defines the actual or preferred existence of a well bore via spatial properties.
Source: makinhole.com

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Trajectory


series of states in a dynamical system {N0, N1, N2, ...}. For a deterministic generator function F() such that Nt+1 = F(Nt), then N1=F(N0), N2=F(F(N0)), etc.
Source: econport.org

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Trajectory


The curve that a body, such as a celestial object, describes in space. This applies to air parcel movement also.
Source: docuweather.com

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Trajectory


The curve that a body, such as a celestial object, describes in space. This applies to air parcel movement also.
Source: communityweather.org.nz

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Trajectory


The curve that a body, such as a celestial object, describes in space. This applies to air parcel
Source: image.weather.com

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Trajectory


The curve that a body, such as a celestial object, describes in space. This applies to air parcel movement also.
Source: 40north70west.com

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Trajectory


See bullet path above.
Source: marplerifleandpistolclub.org.uk

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Trajectory


(astronomy,space) The path of a body as it travels through space. (cybernetics) The ordered set of intermediate states assumed by a dynamical system as a result of time evolution. Metaphorically [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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Trajectory


A trajectory or flight path is the path that a massive object in motion follows through space as a function of time. In classical mechanics, a trajectory is defined by Hamiltonian mechanics via canoni [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Trajectory


A trajectory or flight path is the path that a massive object in motion follows through space as a function of time. In classical mechanics, a trajectory is defined by Hamiltonian mechanics via canoni [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Trajectory


A trajectory is the path a moving object follows through space. Types of trajectories include: Trajectory of a projectile Lofted trajectory—a particular type of non-minimum energy ballistic trajector [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Trajectory


In fluid mechanics, meteorology and oceanography, a trajectory traces the motion of a single point, often called a parcel, in the flow. Trajectories are useful for tracking atmospheric contaminants, s [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org




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