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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "02._What_kinds_of_things_could_float_around_and_make_the_environment_unsanitary" retrieved in 0.050 sec with these stats:

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  • "environ" found 3308 times in 2010 documents
  • "unsanitari" found 1 time in 1 document



... make the environment unhealthy for the astronauts. Examples are pieces of tape, metal filings, and small pieces of electrical wiring. Anything inadvertently left behind by anyone performing work inside the Space Shuttle or the ISS is a hazard to the astronauts. ---- Answer provided by Russell Romanella & George Veaudry Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to ...
... 's orbit? The Moon? Mars or beyond? But no matter what your flight plan, the primary attractions will be an unmatched view of the Earth, the strange feeling of weightlessness, and the wide-eyed wonder of being miles above the planet. ---- Answer provided by Dennis Tito Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to ...
... the past, robots did things humans couldn't, such as going to different planets in the solar system. They still do that work today, but they also help humans. Robots on the ... help the astronauts move and install the larger pieces of the Space Station. Robots helping astronauts is the way of the future. Humans need to be there to do what humans do best—think and respond. Robots, on the ...
The astronauts can darken the lights in the Shuttle and take pictures of famous landmarks on Earth from their vantage point orbiting high above it. Shannon Lucid was amazed to witness the aurora borealis while in space and even ...
Most likely you won't be able to bring dangerous things that are flammable, very heavy, or corrosive. On NASA ships you are not allowed to ... collectors. ---- Answer provided by Roger Crouch, Ph.D. Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer Image:9781894959421.jpg '''Buy ...
... lot of the packaging that is thrown away is used in storing the astronauts' food. Much of the trash consists of human waste. ---- Answer provided by Russell Romanella & George Veaudry Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space ...
... many years in the future, we'll think about missions above the Earth. We'd need to bring all the chemicals or plants or animals that are the subjects of our mission, and the equipment to mix, or modify, or grow them. Cameras for observation and laboratory ...
... Earth. We will likely need facilities in space to deal with the remoteness of human settlements and to deal with the great distances and times between various locations in space. It is likely that we ... 't spend all of our time floating around in zero-gravity or making great leaps in reduced gravity. But there are likely to be new problems that we have not even thought of yet which ...
What's going to be important on the Moon in the early days is to have food that creates a minimal amount of waste excretion, with little smell. This was exactly the kind of diet that the Apollo astronauts got during their voyage. Stuff that crumbles will be unpopular, although there will be ample time to catch crumbs on the Moon. This is why things like tortillas and ...
... heaters and coolers to deal with these wild temperature swings. Other things essential to survival in space include reliable communications, some medical treatment capabilities, computers which help operate the spacecraft, and effective toilet and waste-removal systems, of course. Finally, people in ...

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