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Displaying 91—100 of 1000 matches for query "35._Will_there_be_stores_where_we_can_shop_and_find_things_needed_to_survive_on_an_everyday_basis" retrieved in 0.052 sec with these stats:

  • "35" found 2117 times in 1330 documents
  • "will" found 24730 times in 5032 documents
  • "there" found 19716 times in 3479 documents
  • "be" found 50529 times in 10727 documents
  • "store" found 582 times in 458 documents
  • "where" found 6784 times in 2658 documents
  • "we" found 51112 times in 4364 documents
  • "can" found 11535 times in 3515 documents
  • "shop" found 242 times in 150 documents
  • "and" found 284902 times in 19361 documents
  • "find" found 3656 times in 2018 documents
  • "thing" found 9476 times in 889 documents
  • "need" found 6599 times in 2994 documents
  • "to" found 237450 times in 18716 documents
  • "surviv" found 962 times in 712 documents
  • "on" found 78455 times in 14289 documents
  • "an" found 30101 times in 10130 documents
  • "everyday" found 100 times in 96 documents
  • "basi" found 971 times in 761 documents



... time passing. Therefore minutes and hours will be the same length for space travelers as they are back on Earth. Space travelers on trips through our solar system would need to agree on an Earth time zone for communication with people back home. For many NASA projects this time zone is Central Time, the time zone in Houston, Texas, where NASA ...
... and spare solar panels, and even a spare fuel cell. Today, the space program depends on electricity for everything it does. So if we lose electricity we cannot survive. If we are going to go to space on a regular basis, we need to ...
... we can bring all these things, but we will have to modify them to use whatever voltage there is on the rocket we are on. We can go to school by using books that are loaded onto our computers, and we can talk to teachers on ...
... it, we're in space already. You can imagine the Earth as our planet-sized spaceship, with all the things we need to survivethings like air, water, food, light, and just the right temperature. In order to leave the Earth and survive in space, we need to take those things ...
Many of the problems we will encounter we will be able to solve through engineering. Some of the things we need to work on include growing food, producing energy, protecting ourselves from radiation and redesigning planets so we can live on them. ---- Answer provided by Bradley C. Edwards, Ph.D. Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer ...
We would need spacesuits and artificial environments to survive on the planet Mars. There have been many debates and studies about artificially engineering an Earth-like environment on Mars (called terraforming). However, many challenges and ethical issues would need to be overcome before this could ever happen. ---- Answer provided by Laura Peckyno & Robert Peckyno Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and ...
With the right equipment and training we can make excellent environments for people to safely live in on the Moon. We already know how to do it. Once we return we will learn by living there. ---- Answer provided by John Spencer Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and ...
... ), and people in an orbiting space shuttle somehow managed to survive, there is no place they could go to live. For one thing, there are no other worlds we know of which can support human life, and we ... small. However, there are plans for new spacecraft which will be able to land on the Moon and Mars in the future. Perhaps these vehicles will pave the way to human settlements on other worlds. ---- ...
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 ... crew astronauts to communicate with their friends and family on the ground so it will help lessen the stress of being away from Earth for which can cause damage to human DNA, cells and soft tissue. ---- ...
... to be inflated. Currently, building from scratch in space is very difficult. We try to build as much as we can on Earth, so we can test to make sure things work and are safe. These components will then be sent up to space and be ... to inflate the modules and dock them together to form a larger station. It's not that there is no gravity in space. In fact, at 240 miles, at lower Earth orbit where ...

Additional database time was 0.035 sec.


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