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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "Vertical_Take-Off_Patents" retrieved in 0.003 sec with these stats:
- "vertic" found 2032 times in 1847 documents
- "take" found 6263 times in 2782 documents
- "off" found 6140 times in 3060 documents
- "patent" found 1369 times in 747 documents
... R.B. Brown VTOL Take-off and Landing Aircraft
Media:US3058691.pdf G. Eggers VTOL Take-off Composite Aircraft
Media:US3191316.pdf K. Levin J. Allen Lunar Landing Flight Research Vehicle
Category:Publications
Category:Patent
No, launch is not at all similar to taking off in a jet, although the vehicle will land like one—but with the engine off.
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Answer provided by Lt. Col. USAF (Ret ...
... ASSISTED TAKE-OFF OF AIRCRAFT'''
by Bolster, C. M.
''Northfield (Vermont), 1950: Norwich University, 71 pages, OP''
A ...
Initially, sub-orbital flights will take off and land from the same spaceport. Virgin Galactic is currently looking at a number of ...
Fitting in a small spacecraft and having to stay in one confined position waiting to launch would cause a lot of discomfort for people with back problems. However, once people with back pain got to space, the lack of gravity would probably help them a great deal.
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Answer provided by Col. USAF Dr. Richard S. Williams
Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the ...
Just as during the Apollo launch, the landing structure becomes the launch pad when it's time to leave. The decreased gravity makes it less intense. The one-sixth gravity has more of an effect than the atmosphere.
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Answer provided by Lt. Col. USAF (Ret.) William G. Gregory
Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer
< ...
It has blown up once, and that was in flight and not on the launch pad. There have been a number of times when, for various reasons, launch was delayed.
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Answer provided by Jon H. Brown
Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer
Image:9781894959421.jpg '''Buy This Book''' http://www.apogeebooks ...
If you want to know how much it costs NASA to fly the Space Shuttle once, then that number is a little easier to find. Depending on how you count it's between $500 million and $1.5 billion.
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Answer provided by Ben Reytblat
Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer
Image:9781894959421.jpg ''' ...
Media:US3020002.pdf Vertical Take-off aircraft control
Patent US-3020002
Media:US3065935.pdf Vertical Take-off aircraft
Patent US-3065935
Category:Publications
Category:Patent
Media:US2936969.pdf Jet Sustained and propelled aircraft
Patent US-2936969
Media:US3073549.pdf Jet lift Vertical Take-off aircraft
Patent US-3073549
Category:Publications
Category:Patent
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