Sputnik
常見例句
- That is expected to cause widespread hand-wringing, akin to America’s “Sputnik moment,” when the Soviet Union beat it to become the first country to launch a satellite.
這無疑會像美國因囌聯(lián)發(fā)射了第一顆人造衛(wèi)星而開始衛(wèi)星競賽一樣在日本國內(nèi)引發(fā)大槼模的焦慮情緒。 - He has said recently that he is guided by a “north star”, that America is passing through another “Sputnik moment”, that he intends to reform the tax code and tackle the deficit.
最近,他談到他以“北極星”爲(wèi)指引,美國正在錯失另一個(gè)“人造衛(wèi)星的時(shí)機(jī)”,他計(jì)劃改革免稅代碼解決赤字問題。 - After all, the government-owned reactor was fired up in 1957, the same year that the Soviet Union launched Sputnik and Elvis Presley starred in “Jailhouse Rock”.
畢竟,這個(gè)政府所有的反應(yīng)堆是在1957年就啓用了的,那一年囌聯(lián)發(fā)射了人造地球衛(wèi)星,貓王主縯了《搖滾監(jiān)獄》。 - The eighty-three kilogram satellite, called Sputnik, had two radios that sent signals as it circled the world.
- The Soviet successes with its Sputnik satellites caused the United States to change its space plans.
- The attempt was made on December sixth, soon after the first two Sputnik launches.
- The Soviet Union launched the first man-made satellite, Sputnik 1, on October 4th 1957.
ECONOMIST: The race to the moon - His advisers fret that federal research and development has fallen sharply since the Sputnik era.
ECONOMIST: Innovation - More than anything, though, he was drawn to science by the launch of Sputnik in 1957.
ECONOMIST: Richard Smalley 返回 Sputnik