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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "34._When_someone_is_stuck_in_space,_why_don't_we_just_send_someone_else_out_to_save_them" retrieved in 0.040 sec with these stats:

  • "34" found 2066 times in 1150 documents
  • "when" found 13064 times in 4048 documents
  • "someon" found 333 times in 169 documents
  • "is" found 42921 times in 8383 documents
  • "stuck" found 158 times in 121 documents
  • "in" found 179422 times in 17737 documents
  • "space" found 100917 times in 18940 documents
  • "whi" found 1970 times in 699 documents
  • "don" found 5197 times in 803 documents
  • "t" found 21077 times in 3662 documents
  • "we" found 51112 times in 4364 documents
  • "just" found 8953 times in 1570 documents
  • "send" found 1547 times in 1013 documents
  • "els" found 1087 times in 272 documents
  • "out" found 14154 times in 3695 documents
  • "to" found 237450 times in 18716 documents
  • "save" found 979 times in 717 documents
  • "them" found 8816 times in 2253 documents



... is one of the contingency plans. The plan is to have vehicles on the ground ready to launch expediently should the need arise. However, currently the ISS has a Soyuz vehicle available to use in the event of an emergency. ---- Answer provided by Futron Corporation Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by ...
When water is vented or poured out in space, it typically forms many small droplets that will usually immediately freeze. Since space is effectively a weightless environment, anything poured out will tend to float where it is vented. When water is ...
We have lived in space before and visited the Moon. We are now getting ready to do it again. ---- Answer provided by John Spencer Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space ...
... space civilizations is thus to envision space settlements as positive role models for Earth-bound societies to emulate; defining ethics and morality needs to be a key to planning, governance, law, commerce and living in space. We believe that "''When in ...
... we need to know before planning a human mission to Mars. We are now sending robots to Mars to find these answers. According to NASA, the timing of the first human research missions to ...
... to travel anywhere in space. A trip to Mars will take upward of nine months and the other planets will take us many years to reach. It takes so long to get to ... to gain precious extra velocity by flying close to another planet, which acts like a slingshot effect. This is possible when a spacecraft flies close enough to a planet that it is able to ...
... tolerated. In space, about one-third of astronauts sometimes experience severe nausea which can cause them to throw up and be very sick to their stomachs—this is traceable to the effects of being in a micro-gravity environment and floating freely in space. And there can be ...
We need to have air around us to breathe in oxygen. Just like scuba divers have to carry their air in tanks with them when they go underwater, astronauts have to carry their air with them as well. So far there is ...
... to dock space components. However, in some aspects, zero-gravity will actually make it easier to inflate the modules and dock them together to form a larger station. It's not that there is no gravity in space. In ...
We hope to send a robot spacecraft to Pluto in 2006. It is already built and is being tested right now. Sending humans would be very difficult because of the huge ... 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 Category:Kids To Space ...

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