Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at cabeus.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Cabeus.
Examples
-
GARVIN: Well, maybe the first step is to use our existing lunar reconnaissance orbiter to further scan the moon to see if this particular place, which is called Cabeus is so unique it's the one place to go with future robots.
-
An Icy Moon Revealed Moon can harbor water ice • Slamming a 2-ton spent rocket stage into a permanently dark, frigid crater called Cabeus at 7200 kilometers per hour coaxed a few liters of water into sight.
Recently Uploaded Slideshows govindab 2010
-
This crater, called Cabeus, is one where astronomers think there is a good chance of hidden ice that would be freed by the crash, describing the dirt there as
WRAL.com Top Stories 2009
-
Nasa's LCROSS spacecraft and rocket stage made twin impacts in a crater called Cabeus on October 9.
unknown title 2009
-
Earlier this month, the team announced that they had picked the spacecraft's target, a 48-kilometre-wide crater called Cabeus A on the moon's south pole.
-
That won't happen just anywhere on the lunar surface, but in a thoroughly scrutinized crater called Cabeus that lies near the moon's south pole and is enveloped in perpetual darkness.
FOXNews.com 2009
-
Permanently shadowed craters on the moon are among the in the solar system and have long been suspected to hide significant water deposits, a potential resource for future Lunar CRater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) mission sent a spent rocket stage on a collision course with a 98-kilometre-wide crater called Cabeus on the moon's south pole on 9
-
In October, NASA's LCROSS spacecraft found water when it crashed into a crater called Cabeus that never gets any sunlight.
Gaea Times (by Simple Thoughts) Breaking News and incisive views 24/7 2009
-
LCROSS probe impacted the lunar south pole at a crater called Cabeus on Oct. 9.
FOXNews.com 2009
-
This crater, called Cabeus, is one where astronomers think there is a good chance of hidden ice that would be freed by the crash, describing the dirt there as "fluffy."
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.