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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "11._How_does_it_feel_emotionally_when_the_spacecraft_returns_to_Earth" retrieved in 0.043 sec with these stats:

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  • "feel" found 1428 times in 528 documents
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  • "return" found 4745 times in 2863 documents
  • "to" found 237450 times in 18716 documents
  • "earth" found 21084 times in 7977 documents



... Earth, but the experiences just encountered on orbit—the success of the science experiments, the view of Earth and the heavens, the weightlessness, the realization that few others have experienced this—make us yearn to return to ...
... 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 caused by the ...
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 ...
... 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 they have to be strapped in to go to sleep or by the fact that they always have to be holding ...
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 space were the ... . ---- Answer provided by Dennis Tito Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer Image:9781894959421.jpg '''Buy This Book''' http ...
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 ... by Byron Lichtenberg, Ph.D. Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer Image:9781894959421.jpg '''Buy This Book''' http ...
... , you instantly go from normal weight to twice your weight. Eight and a half minutes later, you go from three times your weight to zero-gravity instantly when the engines shut down. ---- Answer provided by Lt. Col. USAF (Ret.) William G. Gregory Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space ...
... the Earth. There is one special orbit where it takes a full day to orbit around the Earth. So a satellite in this orbit travels around the planet at the same rate that the planet is spinning To return to Earth, it takes the ...
... altitude. Achieving the feeling of weightless can be accomplished through a variety of methods at various altitudes. When you first realize that you've left gravity's grip, it feels weird—like ... . It is difficult to understand that there is no altitude where zero-gravity is reached. Regardless of how far you travel from the Earth there will always exist a slight gravitational pull towards it. ...
... close to Earth, in orbit where astronauts visit often, you would feel weightless. In orbit, gravity still acts on you almost as strongly as it does on Earth but you are moving along with your surroundings so that it seems that you are weightless. This is called apparent weightlessness and it is responsible for the familiar images we see of astronauts floating in their spacecraft and space ...

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