water ice造句1. For dessert, go for fresh fruit or water ice.
2. Most of their mass is ordinary water ice, and the rest is carbon-bearing rocky dust.
3. Before external cooling with the use of water ice, temperature probes should be inserted to monitor the patient's temperature.
4. It looked a lot like water ice.
5. A frozen patch of water ice.
6. Water ice is a critical resource for future space travelers, as well as a requirement for the development of life as it is currently known.
7. Actually, scientists think it's water ice, mixed with dirt and rocks, one to two feet underground.
8. The carbon dioxide and water ice actually sublime in the thin atmosphere directly to gas.
9. Where you have water ice, you have a potential mother lode for lunar prospecting of hydrogen.
10. Low-angle water ice routes with short bulges up to 60 degrees. Still climbable with ten-point crampons .
11. Recent temperature readings by THEMIS have detected water ice poking through in certain places, so the answer seems to be yes.
12. We've confirmed that there was indeed water ice in the ejecta-plume, and that at an abundance there was about 50% greater than our initial estimates.
13. What ice will you have -- water ice or cream ice?
14. Wargo said that the presence of water ice on the moon does not mean that the moon is like an ice-skating rink - not even in the deep craters of the moon's south pole that are in perpetual darkness.
15. According to the Daily Telegraph of October 9, water ice and organic molecules that help to form the basis of life have been discovered on a second asteroid, called 65 Cybele, by astronomers.
16. I use them to make a Summer Pudding or a water ice.
17. Comets differ from asteroids in composition in that comets contain abundant water ice, and possibly other ices as well.
18. It returned exciting evidence that suggests massive deposits of water ice in shadowed crater bottoms near the lunar poles.
19. The LCROSS spacecraft, which slammed into a perpetually shaded lunar crater last fall, turned up evidence of water ice on the surface, but that ice was presumably deposited by an ancient comet impact.
20. "We are on the verge of a renaissance in our thinking about the poles of the Moon, including how water ice gets there, " Anthony Colaprete, principal investigator for LCROSS, said in Nature.
21. Data sets cover the subject areas of glaciers, avalanches, snow cover, polar ice masses, ice cores, sea ice, and fresh water ice. In addition, the WDC includes extensive library holdings.