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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "88._How_far_can_you_jump_before_touching_the_ground" retrieved in 0.020 sec with these stats:

  • "88" found 1490 times in 651 documents
  • "how" found 9066 times in 2689 documents
  • "far" found 2720 times in 1660 documents
  • "can" found 11535 times in 3515 documents
  • "you" found 35744 times in 1428 documents
  • "jump" found 342 times in 218 documents
  • "befor" found 7383 times in 3702 documents
  • "touch" found 451 times in 336 documents
  • "the" found 506431 times in 20587 documents
  • "ground" found 5654 times in 3236 documents



... you are standing still or running prior to jumping. It's tough to get a running start on the Moon, but you can end up running much faster. A long jump would be truly long on the Moon. About six times as far is a good rule of thumb. The Lunar Olympics ...
... . As you go even higher the sky gradually turns darker. At 50 miles, the sky is black, even in daylight. You are in space, and you have left the precious thin atmosphere behind. If the Earth were a grape, then the ...
You cannot survive an instant without the helmet. Without the pressurization that the suit and helmet provide, you would not survive the extreme and sudden loss of pressurization. On Earth, we are used to the 14.7 pounds of pressure that the ...
If you are out of the sunlight you'll be able to see so many stars that it will be hard to recognize the constellations. However all the same constellations will be visible from the Moon as from the Earth ...
... our upper atmosphere before we would find the temperature dropping to a chilly -70° F The troposphere's temperature ranges from 63° F to -135° F. So the key for all ... them to feel comfortable in high-flying airplanes and even higher- flying spaceships. Did you know the astronauts have special heaters in their gloves to keep their fingertips from freezing in space ...
... can see the light from stars hundreds of light years away. Vision in space does not improve, but you can see distant things more clearly because there is no atmosphere to interfere with the light ... Col. USAF Dr. Richard S. Williams Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer Image:9781894959421.jpg '''Buy This ...
Instruments can see farther than humans. There is no atmosphere to get in the way, which is why the Hubble Space Telescope gets such great pictures of distant star formations, and why it ... to see the stars in the sky. The best combination uses both humans and instruments, and each generation sees a little farther. Humans ultimately will be able to see just as far as they ...
... people do not realize this, but we are actually living within the atmosphere of a star called the Sun. The Sun bathes the entire solar system with a volatile mix of highly energized particles ... , which were launched back in the 1970s, are only now just getting to the outer reaches of the solar system and may actually cross the heliopause, where the influence of the Sun's atmosphere begins to ...
... only recently been able to master the cooling capabilities needed to send the Messenger spacecraft to an orbital rendezvous with the planet Mercury in 2011. Based on the learning data that comes back from ... star. ---- Answer provided by Jim Zebrowski Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer Image:9781894959421.jpg '''Buy This ...
... of a circle is defined as 2Π r and is derived from the area of that circle Πr2 . The Moon has an average radius of 1,080 miles, and Π equals 3.14159, so the Moon's circumference is about 6,785 miles. ---- Answer provided by Thomas Matula, Ph.D. & Kenneth J. Murphy Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer Image:9781894959421.jpg '''Buy This ...

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