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View synonyms for escape velocity

escape velocity

noun

, Physics, Rocketry.
  1. the minimum speed that an object at a given distance from a gravitating body must have so that it will continue to move away from the body instead of orbiting about it.


escape velocity

noun

  1. the minimum velocity that a body must have in order to escape from the gravitational field of the earth or other celestial body
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

escape velocity

/ ĭ-skāp /

  1. The velocity needed for a celestial body to overcome the gravitational pull of another, larger body and not fall back to that body's surface. Escape velocity is determined by the mass of the larger body and by the distance of the smaller body from the larger one's center. Depending on its initial trajectory, a smaller body traveling at the escape velocity will either enter a periodic orbit around the larger body or recede from the surface of the larger body indefinitely. The escape velocity at the Earth's surface is about 11.2 kilometers per second (25,000 miles per hour); the escape velocity on the Moon's surface is 2.4 kilometers per second (5,300 miles per hour). The escape velocity within the event horizon of a black hole is higher than the speed of light; since nothing can exceed the speed of light, nothing—even light—can escape from within the event horizon of a black hole.

escape velocity

  1. The speed an object must reach to escape the pull of gravitation exerted by another object.
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Notes

To overcome the gravitation of the Earth and place an artificial satellite in orbit , a rocket must reach a speed of about 25,000 miles per hour, or about seven miles per second.
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Word History and Origins

Origin of escape velocity1

First recorded in 1950–55
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Example Sentences

First, they modeled what sort of impact could eject a blob of that size at the Moon’s escape velocity.

I pray that for them and the millions of kids like them, regardless of race or ethnicity, that everything goes right and they reach escape velocity.

Because there’s no way I could ever achieve escape velocity: the speed an object must reach in order to break away from another object’s gravitational pull.

Meanwhile, electric vehicle sales in America are rising, and the time when they could hit “escape velocity” and really make a difference is on the horizon, Larsen said.

Derivative Rights No one can explain why the Bored Apes achieved cultural and economic escape velocity.

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