English edit

Etymology edit

areo- +‎ synchronous; compare geosynchronous.

Adjective edit

areosynchronous (not comparable)

  1. Having a rate of revolution that matches the rotation period of Mars, and thus remaining over the same point on that planet's surface.[1] (of the orbit of a satellite)
    • 1986, Thomas Wren, chapter 14, in The Doomsday Effect,[2], New York: Baen Books, page 195:
      [] the ships dropped a string of comm-relay satellites in areosynchronous orbit.
    • 2004, Elizabeth Bear, Hammered[3], New York: Bantam, Book 2, p. 180:
      I can’t think of her [the spaceship] as an object. Not when I’m living inside her, sailing serenely along in areosynchronous orbit.

References edit

  1. ^ Michael Quinion, Ologies and Isms, Oxford University Press, 2002.[1]