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Media:1963-07 Engineering Problems on the Moon AD0422956.pdf Engineering Problems on the Moon July 1963 Category:Publications
File:69-07-Eagle-On-The-Moon.mp4 Category:Audio
... gain enough speed on the Moon's rough surface to jump off a ramp, you would travel quite a distance before the gravity pulled you back down. Watch out for the landing though—Moon vehicles wouldn't have rubber tires, so you wouldn't bounce when you hit the surface. Drag racing in space would be quite a challenge because it would require ...
... hydrogen flow across the surface and collect at the north and south poles as ice. The Moon does not have enough of an atmosphere to support the growth of noticeable ice caps, but we believe with a relative degree of confidence that extensive ice is located in the soil and in cold traps at both of the lunar poles. Cold traps are craters on the Moon where, because ...
... the smaller ones (one mile or less in diameter) might someday be turned into domed habitats. The meteor crater in Arizona is a good example of how a smaller lunar crater would appear to astronauts on the Moon. ---- 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 ...
The Moon will always be easier and quicker to visit. A round trip would be just over a week. For Mars it will be over a year, with our current kinds of rocket engines. In the future, it will depend on how the space ...
... bus on the Moon sinks into a lake of Moon dust and becomes trapped. While a frightening thought, and one that seriously concerned early lunar scientists, scientists have generally found that while the ... funny movies from the Apollo missions as astronauts tried with only partial success to get deeper core samples. Unlike mush spots on Earth these would have no water, but be only dust. ---- Answer ...
... sent first to learn about the Moon. There were three series of robotic spacecraft before Project Apollo. They were Ranger, Lunar Orbiter and Surveyor. Rangers 7-9 photographed the Moon up close before crashing on it ... .htm (See CDROM) Lunar Orbiter mapped the Moon's surface from orbit. http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/lunar/lunarorb.html (See CDROM) Surveyor actually landed on the Moon to study its surface. http://nssdc.gsfc ...
Yes, we will land the spaceship on the Moon using rockets just like the Lunar module was used to land astronauts. ---- Answer provided by Thomas Matula, Ph.D. & Kenneth J. Murphy Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the ...
There is no official age limit, but the youngest astronaut ever selected to go to space was 25. It will be many years before kids will be able to go. ---- Answer provided by Col. USAF (Ret.) Rick Searfoss Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the ...

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