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

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  • "go" found 15794 times in 2028 documents



There is no average mile per hour. It depends on where you want to go with your rocket. There are minimum speeds that a rocket must travel to do certain things, depending on how fast we want to ...
... ,000 miles. When the early explorers used to go around the Earth in their galleons, it took them years to get back to their starting point. Astronauts now do it in an hour and ...
... to find fossils on Mars might take months. So, with that understanding, let's say an average mission might take one-quarter of the length of your trip. ---- Answer provided by Charles ...
... ,000 miles across from side to side, or 25,000 miles around the equator, which is pretty big—a modern jetliner takes nearly two days to fly around it. But an astronaut gets around it in only an hour and a ... sphere but is slightly flattened at the poles, so there is a difference of 25 miles in the diameter at the equator, and at the poles. ---- Answer provided by Derek Webber ...
... of today's astronauts has been any higher than LEO orbit, at about 250 miles altitude, and they go around the Earth once every 90 minutes. Some of them stay at the International Space Station (ISS) for as long as six months at a time, going around the Earth sixteen times a day, every day. ---- Answer provided by Derek Webber Image ...
Mars is slightly more than half the size of Earth. It has an equatorial diameter of about 4,229 miles. However, since Mars has no oceans, the surface area of Mars is ...
I think the fastest speed was the Saturn rocket, which pushed the Apollo spacecraft to speeds of 25,000+ mph. ---- Answer provided by John ...
As of August 2005, both Spirit and Opportunity have traveled over three miles. The rovers were designed to last for only three months but are currently both approaching ...
At its closest point to Earth, Mars is about 35 million miles away; however, because of orbital variations and the natural motion of the planets, it can be as far away as 249 million miles. ---- Answer provided by Laura Peckyno & Robert Peckyno Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted ...
... together, on the same side of the Sun, they are about 1,604,318,281 miles apart. When they are at their furthest point from each other, they are about 1,961,855,265 miles apart. ---- Answer provided by Laura Peckyno & Robert Peckyno Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer ...

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