Trajectory in a sentence as a noun

Finally my career trajectory lined up and I got there.

This trajectory implies that mobile phones could soon carry >39 megapixel cameras routinely.”Ah Moore's Law.

Our initial work focused on the pod itself, but we want to expand it to include trajectory analysis as well as cost modeling.

I can write a pretty reliable program to compute sin/cos tables or to sort a phonebook or to do some basic projectile trajectory.

You would expect a big chunk of the population to not have much in the way of assets, simply because the trajectory of peoples' lives is to build up assets as they age over time.

Ms Brakke shares how her high expectations helped change the academic trajectory of one particularly challenging student.

And just as soon they will be the only launch provider capable of putting 50 tonne payloads into LEO or 10 tonne payloads into GEO or on an interplanetary trajectory.

Even though the attitude and trajectory of the robot is governed by the information coming from the camera it does also rely on feedback from the wheel speed sensors.

Although it's a bit of an apple to oranges comparison Copenhagen suborbitals are on the trajectory to launching a human into space in around three years time.

"Reading pithy superficial quotes about startups changed my companies trajectory.

It's pretty damned amazing to me that we have the ability to detect the location, dimension, and trajectory of a mere 3 earth-masses of thin, amorphous gas 27k light years away, in the noisiest and densest part of the galaxy.

Good luck with Y Combinator's investment is my sole commentary on this news: I'm smart enough to divide between Dustin Curtis and Svbtle and realize that my thoughts on and the trajectory of one don't necessarily impact the other.

Astronomers have spotted a cloud of gas with a mass about three times that of Earth that's on a trajectory that will have it pass close to Sgr A in 2013*If this is for real, I am ridiculously humbled by the power of modern astronomy.

This sounds like a pretty typical trajectory for a failed startup: CEO dreams big, encourages sales guys to chase big fish through the commission structure, but meanwhile the big fish demand more features, guarantees, complex contracts, etc. than 15 smaller customers would.

That's a data point in the favor of at least some investors making investments in companies which have a projected trajectory where massive success results in a company on the scale of 37Signals/FogCreek/Wufoo rather than resulting in a company on the scale of Zynga/Groupon.

Trajectory definitions

noun

the path followed by an object moving through space

See also: flight