Search wiki using Sphinx
From The Space Library
Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "01._Does_anyone_ever_get_hurt" retrieved in 0.003 sec with these stats:
- "01" found 1884 times in 1081 documents
- "doe" found 1502 times in 887 documents
- "anyon" found 262 times in 206 documents
- "ever" found 2664 times in 1389 documents
- "get" found 9897 times in 1611 documents
- "hurt" found 102 times in 76 documents
As on Earth, injuries occur in space. To date few have been serious and no astronaut has had to be evacuated to Earth for treatment.
----
Answer provided by Col. USAF Dr. Richard S. Williams
Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer
Image:9781894959421.jpg '''Buy This Book''' http://www. ...
Each national program does things a little differently in the way they train their astronauts. All space crews spend ... the training program is for the international crew members to spend time working together to get familiar with how each other works. These training experiences can include going through wilderness experiences ...
... depends upon the activity or circumstance involved. For example, space is a micro-gravity environment. Getting hurt from falling down is not very likely. However due to the micro-gravity, it is ...
... mass, which means that if something that was very heavy collided with you, it could hurt depending on the speed. We plan for these items and keep them on tethers or ...
A few astronauts get sick at first, although I never did. There is probably fear there for everyone, but ...
... busy learning how to move around in different gravity you can get disoriented or make mistakes. That can be frustrating and get on your nerves. But the excitement of being in space ...
The key to getting into orbit is to go very, very fast—17,500 miles per hour (mph). ...
... about two million years ago that humans started to appear. We certainly took our time getting started Only in the last century did we leave the Earth for the first time ...
Well, basically, you feel free. There is nothing to hold you to the ground. You could have drawers on the ceiling and they would be just as easy to reach as a cabinet on the floor because you could simply float to whatever you need. Each person's body is a little different in terms of the time it takes to adjust to weightlessness. I would imagine that sometimes the astronauts feel annoyed that ...
No—the tidal forces for small black holes would be too great for any human to survive the trip. Larger black holes would allow for the possibility for humans to survive the trip past the event horizon, but then the unlucky astronaut would disappear from existence and have no way to communicate what he might be encountering
----
Answer provided by Jim Zebrowski
Image:K2S ...
Additional database time was 0.035 sec.
Result page: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | Next |
Powered by Sphinx