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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "10._Will_we_have_enough_fuel" retrieved in 0.012 sec with these stats:

  • "10" found 47166 times in 17591 documents
  • "will" found 24730 times in 5032 documents
  • "we" found 51112 times in 4364 documents
  • "have" found 26468 times in 6392 documents
  • "enough" found 1948 times in 978 documents
  • "fuel" found 3431 times in 1921 documents



The mission will be carefully planned so that there is enough fuel. However, if the spaceship should run out of fuel the astronauts would be lost, unless they could be rescued using another spaceship ... /For%20Kids/KidstoSpace.html Click here Category:Kids To Space Category:Kids To Space - FUEL
You will certainly have enough supplies to last for the expected duration of the mission and probably an extra day ...
I'm not sure if dreams do change in space. ---- Answer provided by Dr. Jay C. Buckey, Jr. 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.com/Books/For%20Kids/KidstoSpace.html Click here Category:Kids To Space ...
... enough water up from the Earth's surface to support a long-duration mission. Because of the expense of lifting high quantities of water up to orbit, we have considered a number of different alternatives: Staging water in orbit gradually over time and well in advance of an expected mission. Excess LOH fuel ... LaGrangian points where gravitational fields will allow objects placed in a specific ...
When we live on the Moon or on Mars, we will always have to wear some version of our spacesuit. It may look different than it now looks but it will still have to provide the ... and cold. It must provide us with the oxygen that we need to breathe and survive. Of course, in space we are in weightlessness—our body weight is zero pounds, and ... . So the weight of the suit is not a factor. It would be nice to have them less bulky to give us more freedom of movement. ---- Answer provided by Lonnie Moffitt ...
... humans and will continue to be that way, spacesuits are our armor against that environment. We must take our environment with us in space. There is no air to breathe and we have to make our own air. Since space is extremely hot or extremely cold, we have to provide a way to keep our body temperature normal. To do this, it takes a spacesuit and that means it takes room to do that. Since we are weightless ...
... bowl, so we drink them through straws. Knives require a cutting surface like a plate or table, neither of which we have room to store, or a place to clean. So we eat everything ...
We have many of those technologies now but they are too expensive for a real life in ... cost of travel to space. It is very expensive. We hope to have reduced many of the costs in the next 15 years so we can begin more extensive activities in space. ---- Answer ...
No, you will not have to go through the full two years of astronaut training. ---- Answer provided by Tim Bailey & ...
... for deep space missions will be stored as cryogenic liquids, meaning they are normally gases but are compressed to a liquid state to reduce their volume. But cryogens have extremely low temperatures ... electrical propulsion, oxidizers would not be required (since there is no combustion) and only a fuel (for example, hydrogen) would be required. ---- Answer provided by Jon H. Brown Image:K2S ...

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