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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "01._Is_there_any_natural_water_anywhere_in_space" retrieved in 0.020 sec with these stats:

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  • "space" found 100917 times in 18940 documents



Yes. In fact, all of the water we see here on Earth originally came from space. Water is created by combining two basic elements found almost anywhere we look, Hydrogen (H), and Oxygen (O). Hydrogen, Helium, and Oxygen are the most plentiful elements that we know of in our ...
... it blob and can we catch it in our mouths? (NP) It is more difficult to drink in space because there is no apparent gravity to hold a drink in the cup. So instead of using cups, we drink through straws from small bags. However, if we were to spill any of ... together by surface tension. In fact, if you carefully form such a sphere with a drink like water, you can insert a straw into the floating sphere of spilled water, and drink it ...
... the presence of water hidden deep within the soils of Mars and there is even an ocean found beneath the thick exterior crust on one of Jupiter's moons, Europa. Since water is important to help life gain a foothold, scientists are eagerly planning future missions to explore these regions of space for traces of life. ---- Answer provided ...
With current rocket engines and spacecraft technology, it does take a long time to travel anywhere in space. A trip to Mars will take upward of nine months and the other planets will ... extra velocity by flying close to another planet, which acts like a slingshot effect. This is possible when a spacecraft flies close enough to a planet that it ... and this will need to be carefully considered for manned missions in the future, as the less time we are in open space and at the risk of receiving harmful radiation doses, the ...
This technique has varied with space missions. However, all methods of hand washing require a water source and something like soap or disinfectant tissue wipes for quick clean-ups. Washcloths and ... the Shuttle era has contributed dry shampoo, which is used as you would use it here on Earth. It is very important to stay clean in space. ---- Answer provided by Col. USAF (Ret.) William ...
Since there is no atmosphere to speak of in space, in the shaded areas temperatures can be cold enough to freeze an uninsulated container of water immediately, forming small ice crystals that decay in a few hours. ---- Answer provided by Joe Rhemann Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by ...
Actually, there is oxygen in space; however, the majority of it has already been captured gravitationally by stars, planets, or other celestial bodies. So space is almost a perfect vacuum, but gas and dust particles do ... to say, there isn't very much oxygen in outer space, but there is some. And the reason there isn't more is simply that the gravity of all the other various celestial objects out there, including galaxies ...
There is static electricity in Space. It comes from rubbing certain things together and building up an electrical charge. This happens whether there is air or no air. There are electrical storms that come indirectly from the ... on the earth like lightning storms. But there is no lightning in space because lightning comes from charges in clouds, and clouds come from air, and there is no air in space. ---- Answer provided by John Cavallaro Image:K2S ...
There is no wind coming from air, so there is no wind in space. There is a solar wind, and right now scientists are trying to see if they can use this wind to push a rocket with a special type of windmill. There are other kinds of power we could use in space: fuel cells, batteries, and nuclear power. ---- Answer provided by John Cavallaro ...
... in your heart and lungs that detect how well hydrated you are. Millions of years of evolution have adjusted those sensors to this one-gravity balance of fluids in the body. In space, where there is no apparent gravity, the fluids shift back up towards these sensors, which are fooled into thinking you have too much water in you, and therefore ...

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