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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "43._Could_we_live_inside_the_Moon" retrieved in 0.021 sec with these stats:
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- "moon" found 11511 times in 3952 documents
We probably will be living inside the Moon, at least at first. Since there is no atmosphere or magnetic field on the Moon we'll need to put something in the way of cosmic rays and the solar ... tunnels could be constructed underground where humans could live and work. In fact this would be the preferred living environment since it would also protect humans from the wide swings in temperature on the ...
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 ... must provide us with the proper heating and cooling that our body needs to survive the extremes of heat 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 the spacesuit also weighs zero pounds. So the weight of the ...
Until we find old lava tubes and caves, the only way we are going to be going inside the Moon is to dig our way in. Because of the lower gravity, lack of water and lack of thermal activity, humans would be able to tunnel into the Moon to a far greater depth than on Earth.
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Answer provided by Thomas Matula, Ph.D. & Kenneth J. Murphy
Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book ...
... -1, or we could do what's called a trans-lunar injection (TLI) burn to take us directly out to lunar orbit. From EML-1 we can get to anywhere on the Moon's surface ... would take about a week—the same length of time it used to take aircraft to travel across the Pacific Ocean—but we could go anywhere on the Moon. Traveling from a LEO orbit to a LLO with a TLI and then down to the Moon's surface would take ...
... be very expensive and very difficult to build. This shield could not be large enough to encompass a planet or the Moon but possibly could be large enough to contain a small community.
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Answer provided by Lonnie Moffitt & Russell Romanella
Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids ...
... millions of people living in space, on the Moon and on Mars. In 50 years there may be enough people and biospheres (farms) that if something happened to the people of Earth the human species ... settlements.
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Answer provided by John Spencer
Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer
Image:9781894959421.jpg '''Buy This ...
Yes, we will return to the Moon and live there. We will design the right equipment and train our people so they can safely live and work on the Moon. Eventually the Moon will be a place for tourists to go just for the fun ...
One of the goals of living in a lunar colony would be to set up a working community. So yes, there ... a branch of the International Space University on the Moon. You would have the opportunity to get "up close and personal" with data needed for a lunar research project right from the Moon and then be able to send it back to Earth Research and development would be very important at the university level. Can you imagine the discoveries and inventions that could happen ...
With the right equipment and training we can make excellent environments for people to safely live in on the Moon. We already know how to do it. Once we return we will learn by living there.
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Answer provided by John Spencer
Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book ...
Actually, we already live in space since we live on a planet, and the chances of getting hit by anything while in space are no worse than the chances that we'll get hit by anything here on Earth.
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Answer provided by Alan Hale, Ph.D. & Capt. USN (Ret.) William Readdy
Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the ...
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