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From The Space Library
Displaying 1—10 of 764 matches for query "Acct_creation_throttle_hit" retrieved in 0.001 sec with these stats:
- "acct" found 0 times in 0 documents
- "creation" found 425 times in 341 documents
- "throttl" found 77 times in 50 documents
- "hit" found 702 times in 415 documents
... kind of large asteroid are very, very slim. You are just as likely to be hit by an asteroid in space as you are here on Earth. For much smaller objects ...
... very tiny (dust particle size) objects quite often. It is possible that larger objects could hit the Space Station, but this is very unlikely.
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Answer provided by Alan Hale, Ph.D ...
... not depends upon how large it might be and where we might be when it hits. A very large asteroid (a few miles across) would cause damage over the entire planet ...
... 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.) ...
... laser
'''JBIS Reference Code ''' - 2004.57.362
'''Number of Pages''' - 17
Abstract
Several methods of creation of the directed plasma fluxes by the groups of the distant microexplosions and applications of ...
... POLARIS: THE CONCEPT AND CREATION OF A NEW AND MIGHTY WEAPON'''
by Baar, J. and W. E. Howard
''New York, ...
... to be played indoors so you would not need a spacesuit. When the ball is hit, it will go much further than it does on Earth, so the outfielders will have ...
You actually can hit any and every surface, if you are not careful. The best thing to do is ...
- 35. In the craters, can you see any marks from meteorites that might have hit them? (A K2S Question)
Yes, it's possible that fragments of the object that hit them have survived, just as meteorites are occasionally found on Earth.
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Answer provided by Thomas ...
Astronaut Alan Shepard played golf on the moon in 1971, and that ball sure did travel A golf course would be much different than here on Earth because grass won't grow, so it would be like one big sand trap. You might want to stick to a challenging game of mini golf.
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Answer provided by US Space and Rocket Center
Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book ...
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