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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "19._What_are_some_of_the_unexpected_realities_that_we_should_anticipate" retrieved in 0.052 sec with these stats:

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  • "should" found 4275 times in 2282 documents
  • "anticip" found 517 times in 434 documents



You should expect to be awed by the experience and, unless you're a writer, poet or composer, don't expect to ever truly be able to fully communicate what it's like to spend time in space. ---- Answer provided by Dennis Tito Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space ...
Some people give specific reasons for wanting to travel into space such as wanting to experience the excitement of being an astronaut, to view the Earth, to float in zero-gravity, to play ... are also interested for spiritual reasons. These might be religious, but they also feel that the opportunity to view the Earth, to obtain an intense experience of the cosmos, and to look down upon the rest of ...
The risks and dangers are many and not to be ignored. However, I did a risk analysis and decided that for me, the experience and the ability to achieve a life-long dream was worth the risks involved. ---- Answer provided by Dennis Tito Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the ...
... years of schooling before they submit their applications and are invited for astronaut job interviews. ---- Answer provided by Col. USAF (Ret.) Rick Searfoss Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the ...
When you are in space you can see even more of the night sky than you can see from here on the ground. On Earth the atmosphere distorts and scatters some of the light coming from stars. Also in space, there is a lot less light pollution to hide the really dim objects ...
... many probes and satellites to learn about the space environment and space travel in order to determine the types of hazards that exist. Many of the risks faced on Earth are also faced in space. Depending upon ... in a space environment. However, there are some particular challenges that are unique to space: a lack of breathable air in the space environment, travel at a high rate of speed—17, 500 miles per hour ...
... part of some medical tests or you could photograph features of the Earth, the atmosphere, or the stars with special camera equipment. Other useful experiments might be planned with growing plants or young animals. Since we are still learning how to live and work in the ...
On Mercury, the days are extremely hot, the nights are extremely cold and it has no atmosphere. On Venus, the atmospheric pressure is so great that you would be crushed to death and, when it rains ... has big dust storms, but we can survive them, just as people and animals who live in the deserts on Earth survive dust storms. We cannot land on the gas giants. Forget Pluto, it ...
... interested in what lies just beyond the next hill or sea or even star. In my opinion, one of the benefits of the ISS and its long-term value to society is to lay the groundwork for us to expand the reaches of human civilization beyond Earth orbit to the Moon, Mars and other places in our solar system. In other words, we're not going just to visit; we ...
... to get to even the nearest planets with the current technology we are using. And then it requires another leap of the imagination to go beyond our solar system into the vast area of interstellar space and beyond into intergalactic space It requires a journey of the ...

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