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Galileo, for one
Answer for the clue "Galileo, for one ", 10 letters:
astronomer
Alternative clues for the word astronomer
Word definitions for astronomer in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. One who studies astronomy, the stars or the physical universe; a scientist whose area of research is astronomy or astrophysics
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
The Astronomer ( Seginn Gallio ) is a fictional character , an ancient alien appearing in the Marvel Comics universe . He is one of the Elders of the Universe . His first appearance was in Silver Surfer (Vol.3) #4.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Astronomer \As*tron"o*mer\, n. [See Astronomy .] An astrologer. [Obs.] --Shak. One who is versed in astronomy; one who has a knowledge of the laws of the heavenly orbs, or the principles by which their motions are regulated, with their various phenomena. ...
Usage examples of astronomer.
Let us therefore not attempt to dislodge the Greek astronomer from his pedestal as the discoverer of precession unless we can find a significantly more accurate value recorded in a significantly more ancient source.
She was a fine operations astronomer, skilled at sampling the steady stream of data that flowed through the High Energy Astrophysics Center, though a bit too earnest for his taste.
Sitting near him in the cafeteria was a Pipe-Rilla astronomer, about to leave Barchan en route to the Eta Cass ring system.
Nathan Twining of the AAF and then USAF Air Material Command Professor Donald Menzel, Harvard astronomer and Naval Intelligence cryptography expert Vannevar Bush, Joint Research and Development Board Chairman Detlev Bronk, Chairman of the National Research Council and biologist who would ultimately be named to the National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics.
The Astronomer Royal had chosen his offices here, rather than in his college, out of a desire to escape the busyness of the central town.
Tach than an astronomers, so he recognized here a centrifuge, there a microtome, and so on.
There are often vouchsafed to us here hours of outsoaring emotion and conception which make the enclosures in which the astronomer loiters seem narrow.
But, as astronomers had been learning for centuries, the rules of planetography were made to be broken.
Whereas against all this, which had been confirmed and reconfirmed in the scriptures, poetry, feelings, and visions of all ages, what Copernicus proposed was a universe no eye could see but only the mind imagine: a mathematical, totally invisible construction, of interest only to astronomers, unbeheld, unfelt by any others of this human race, whose sight and feelings were locked still to earth.
West Coast astronomers complained about the difficulties in traveling to the third conference of astronomers and astrophysicists at Yerkes and seem to have voiced some pleasure that promised demonstrations with the Yerkes 40-inch refractor for this ceremony had to be postponed because of cloudy weather.
The third, launched in August 2003, is the Space Infrared Telescope Facility, now known as the Spitzer Space Telescope in honor of the great Princeton astronomer Lyman Spitzer, Jr.
Astronomers can spectroscopically identify a vast supergiant star which moves alternately nearer to and farther from Earth every few days.
I learned that two astronomers at the University of Cambridge, Ian Redmount and Martin Rees, now predict beamlike gravitational radiation might be emitted from certain superheavy objects out there.
The single finest tellurium in existence was built by the New England machinist, astronomer, and misanthrope, Benjamin Dee, in 1816.
Christian Scientists, psycho-analysts, electronic vibration diviners, therapeutists of all schools registered and unregistered, astrologers, astronomers who tell us that the sun is nearly a hundred million miles away and the Betelgeuse is ten times as big as the whole universe, physicists who balance Betelgeuse by describing the incredible smallness of the atom, and a host of other marvel mongers whose credulity would have dissolved the Middle Ages in a roar of sceptical merriment.