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Discover Ludwig"beams up" is a legitimate phrase that can be used in written English.
It is used to describe a person or thing traveling up in a beam of light or energy, as seen in science fiction. For example: "The alien spaceship soared through the sky and suddenly beamed up into the stars".
Dictionary
beams up
verb
Third person singular of beam up
Exact(31)
Proton beams up to 33 MeV and He2+ beams up to 81.2 MeV can also be accelerated in this accelerator.
First beams up to 850 keV have been obtained after only 4 weeks of commissioning.
For these applications, high power Linear Accelerator (LINAC) are planned to produce and accelerate hadron beams up to 1 GeV.
A tiny mirror mounted above the array rotates to sweep the beams up and down while their intensities are varied, reproducing text and simple images.
The ultimate moments predicted using BS 8110 overestimates for the PSCC beams up to the reinforcement ratio of 1.26%.
The performance of a 20-layer prototype was tested at CERN with electron, myon and pion beams up to 100 GeV and with protons up to 250 GeV.
Similar(29)
Ms. Berman beamed up at him.
Quinn beamed up at him and nodded enthusiastically.
It looks a lot like someone on "Star Trek" getting beamed up — except the beaming up never finishes.
Beaming up at me, as one might say.
Applewhite not only acquired her lingo (resurrection became "beaming up") but converted the cheeriness of U.F.O.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com