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Displaying 1—10 of 590 matches for query "Accesskey-watch" retrieved in 0.001 sec with these stats:

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  • "watch" found 1134 times in 598 documents

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... Infobox bodystyle = float:right; valign:top; title = titlestyle = image = image:Watch Logo.GIF 200px imagestyle = caption = The Watch: Threat & Promise captionstyle = headerstyle = background: ccf; labelstyle = background: ddf; datastyle = text-align:right; '''The ... Schlather, Richard Godwin , Gen Pete Worden, Dr Brian Marsden, Dr Lee Valentine Media:The_Watch.pdf‎ The Watch: A Project of the Space Frontier Foundation‎ Media: Chicago_Fire_Comet.pdf‎ Did a ...
... , but nothing like we get on Earth. And we will probably not be able to watch all our favorite TV shows, because there will not be enough TV channels being transmitted ...
... William Readdy) You set your watch to mission elapsed time or MET for orbital missions. MET starts at lift off. That ...
As a general rule I would think that when serious work is being done you will be allowed to observe from a distance so as not to interfere or be a distraction. Depending on the extent of pre-flight training you might be permitted to do simple tasks that do not pose a risk to equipment or safety. Tasks such as changing an air filter, operating a trash compactor, vacuuming and cleaning a surface, ...
We need to be careful to find out what it will take to allow humans to survive for long periods of time in the micro-gravity environment of space. For instance, we now know that humans lose about one percent of their bone mass density for every month they are in orbit. NASA is studying ways to minimize this problem by having all astronauts and cosmonauts work out for at least two hours every day ...
... I did six or seven years later, and I became a test pilot and was watching and following the space program. The French Space Administration had started also to show interest ... checklist, but I remember when I was waiting for the first-stage blowup, for my watch it happened one minute before schedule because I was still waiting for the next minute ... shorter span, because you think about the nice side of spaceflight. For example, you are watching some stuff on Earth, and you know with the orbital position that if you don ...
... about, I think it was about ten days at White Sands, watching them do all kinds of adiabatic detonation tests, watching all kinds of things blow up. And I came back from ... people that were in between us, they moved out into later in the flow. And watching that pad abort, whoa. Laughs Not sure that this is something, because you could tell ... ’ for launch. Do you want to come down and watch it?” So we got out of the simulator and watched it and watched what happened. We realized, since we were the next flight ...
... for you? '''O'Hara:''' Well, at times it seemed endless. '''Wright:''' Because you watched these men and you watched them land on the Moon, but when they were on their way back ... I couldn’t believe they operated like this. Nobody was running around and checking their watches, and I was constantly looking over my shoulder, thinking I had to be somewhere, do ... describe it. It was just simply unreal. '''Wright:''' They had a chance to watch this historic, and they were watching them land, but at the same time, then, once again, they had ...
... in the suit room and began suiting up. On my ankle I carried a watch. I put a watch on my ankle. I was not supposed to be taking anything extra up ... counterweight in it, and I was very curious to find out if the self-winding watch would still work in weightless environment or whether that weightless environment would inhibit the motion ... what we expected them to be. The physiological experiments were really interesting to us, to watch how our bodies accommodated to the weightless environment. We were really interested in that. '''Rusnak ...
... interested in aviation when I was—I can remember being probably four or five and watching some of the first jet aircraft make contrails in the sky, and I remember lying ... South Weymouth Naval Air Station in Massachusetts. So from that point on, I grew up watching airplanes coming and going, taking off, landing, flying around the neighborhood. I saw the Blue ... third grade or so, 19 ’61, when Alan B. Shepard Jr. launched, and I remember watching that on television and it took my interest in aviation and my amazement to a ...

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