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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "07._How_does_it_feel_when_you're_up_there" retrieved in 0.011 sec with these stats:

  • "07" found 1861 times in 1145 documents
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  • "doe" found 1502 times in 887 documents
  • "it" found 81427 times in 11675 documents
  • "feel" found 1428 times in 528 documents
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  • "you" found 35744 times in 1428 documents
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  • "up" found 14378 times in 4029 documents
  • "there" found 19716 times in 3479 documents



It's almost euphoric. The weightlessness and freedom of effortless movement is hard to describe. I can say that that you get a sense of total relaxation. The nights I slept in ...
It feels great to float. Yes, you float the entire time you are in orbit, even in your sleeping bunk. It never is annoying except when you want to find some piece of equipment that you thought you had placed next to you, only ...
... descending. When we encounter the atmosphere, approximately 400,000 feet above the Earth, there is an increase of sound caused by the air rushing by the orbiter, a feeling of heaviness ... crew have never experienced these feelings and sights before. Training in preparation for the mission is excellent, but it does not replicate accurately the ascent, orbit and re-entry sensations. ---- Answer ...
Only to the extent that there is still some gravity, which means eventually you will end up back on the ground. The air in your suit and the base will smell different, and will likely have a gunpowder tinge to it. There is nothing to hear in vacuum, though you'd feel the rare moonquake through the ground. Looking out across the Moon's surface your eyes would tell you that the ...
It feels awesome. You can float and do flips and rolls, and just stay in one place with the effort of one finger. If you want, you can float upside down while your friend is right side up. ---- Answer provided by Byron Lichtenberg, Ph.D. Image:K2S ...
... , 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 ...
When the mission is over the crew, myself included, has many emotions—some conflicting. We're always excited about being back on Earth, but the experiences just encountered on orbit&mdash ...
Brushing your teeth while you're floating is a cinch. Plus, floating around while brushing your teeth is fun. ---- Answer provided ...
There is a wide variety of views and feelings about this. Some people believe that it is humankind's destiny to travel into space, to settle on other planets and perhaps ... people believe that there are more important needs here on Earth and that space travel is therefore an expensive and unnecessary waste. Perhaps the answer is that humankind does not need to ...
... Shuttle pressure suits, which makes it very hard to breathe while lying down strapped into their reclining couches as the Shuttle main engines are firing. When the Shuttle jettisons the large external fuel tank, the main Shuttle engines stop firing, the pressure instantly disappears, and the astronauts feel a very light sensation. They ...

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