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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "10._What_if_someone_dies_in_space,_will_there_be_a_burial" retrieved in 0.038 sec with these stats:

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  • "burial" found 25 times in 8 documents



... buried in space, or had their body released into space after death. For future long-term space travel, people may decide to perform burials-in-space much like burials-at-sea, in which a body is released from a ship in a casket. Or they may decide to do cremations and scatter a dead person's ashes into space. ---- Answer provided ...
... Mars with human teams until about 2030. Space is big. It can hold as many people as we can find the technology to put there. ---- Answer provided by Sheryl L. Bishop, Ph.D. Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer
... carried with any mission, just to be sure we don't run out. Eventually we would run out if we somehow lost all the oxygen through a leak, or the systems that make ... failed. But remember, when we fly humans in space we always have systems that have multiple backup systems, so that if something fails we are ready with a backup. ---- Answer provided by Lonnie Moffitt ...
... communities in which to live and work, there will be specialists to serve the needs of those communities. I imagine when we finally establish communities in space that eventually there will be optometrists to meet the needs of people there. ---- Answer provided by Col. USAF Dr. Richard S. Williams Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space ...
... work them out. It could be a good job in the future. Wouldn't that be neat, figuring out the best way for the highways between the planets? If you want to do this, you ... Space - by Lonnie Schorer Image:9781894959421.jpg '''Buy This Book''' http://www.apogeebooks.com/Books/For%20Kids/KidstoSpace.html Click here Category:Kids To Space Category:Kids To Space ...
I'm sure before you go you will have a list of everything that will be provided as well as everything you will need to take. ---- Answer provided by Roger Crouch, Ph.D. Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space ...
... There probably will not be a dentist on board in case of emergency, and there can be dental problems in space. On the Soyuz 28 flight in 1978, Yuri Romanenko was reported to have taken pain medication for ... . If there is a dental problem, however, there is equipment on board to put in a temporary filling, cover a broken tooth or pull a tooth if needed. One or two members of the crew get training in ...
Yes, we can bring all these things, but we will have to modify them to use whatever voltage there is on the rocket we are on. We can go to school by ... on Earth via a radio link, and even hook up a small TV camera to see each other. If we work in space or on the Moon, then that is where we would be going to work. But to travel back and forth to Earth to go to work would be very ...
Who knows? When space travel is very popular and lots of people are in space, there will be some entrepreneur there to sell what people need. It sure would be a long distance to travel to go to the local ... Lonnie Moffitt 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.apogeebooks ...
... spacea so-called sub-orbital trip—for between $100,000 and $250,000. The trip to the low Earth orbit will probably be much more expensive for a long time. Although there are many people trying to get the price down below a million dollars, it doesn't look likely any time soon. Most of the expense in flying in space ...

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