Search wiki using Sphinx

From The Space Library

Jump to: navigation, search

Displaying 121—130 of 1000 matches for query "31._Will_there_be_a_second_big_bang" retrieved in 0.018 sec with these stats:

  • "31" found 20734 times in 8556 documents
  • "will" found 24730 times in 5032 documents
  • "there" found 19716 times in 3479 documents
  • "be" found 50529 times in 10727 documents
  • "a" found 169938 times in 18149 documents
  • "second" found 6162 times in 3638 documents
  • "big" found 2524 times in 729 documents
  • "bang" found 237 times in 150 documents



... . That might be a government agency or department, but if the trip is privately sponsored that would be a company or business. In all cases, someone in charge of trip safety will make the final ...
... sporting events similar to those on Earth will be played on the Moon. However, there will be one big exception. The low gravity on the Moon means individuals will be able to leap far higher and run much ... down the regolith on the sides of craters. It is likely that new extreme sports will drive a lot of technology advances in spacesuit design, just as extreme sports have driven clothing ...
... is something that the astronauts practice in water in the NBL. It is just like a football player who gets used to wearing the helmet and all those pads. The helmet ... knows? Maybe you will be that scientist who invents a way to supply oxygen without wearing the spacesuits. Whatever it is, there must be some apparatus that will do that for us because there is no oxygen ...
... a ratio of oxygen and nitrogen (1:4) for breathing. This is what we call a shirt-sleeve environment, so there will be no need for air helmets or spacesuits when you are inside, unless there is an emergency. Any space modules we build must be air-tight, so breathable air will ...
... Earth is like getting a lesson in geography in the most amazing classroom you can imagine. It is a little disappointing at first to realize that there are no big capital letters over each ... where I was. Different places on the Earth have different textures and colors, and after a while I could differentiate between the craggy sharp edges of South America and the smooth ...
... comes first, and then the Moon. Probably Mars will come next, and its weird moons Phobos and Deimos, which look like big potatoes. Astronauts will explore some asteroids, and maybe go to some of the moons of other planets. Mercury and Venus may be too hot and dangerous to visit for a long ...
... will be mandatory but could be done in less than a day. The courses that teach you what to do when you are in space will be longer—anywhere from a day to a week—and will step you through what to expect on launch, in space and on landing. There are longer classes you ...
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 ...
It would depend on where and how far you will be traveling in space. If you wanted a chance to reach space, you would need to go about 62 miles up from Earth ... there. Right now NASA is working on new ways of building a rocket that would get you to Mars much faster. Once on Mars you would want to live there for at least a year and do all kinds of activities and experiments to help build a colony for future space visitors. ---- Answer provided ...
Inside the hotel, there would be zero-gravity to near-zero-gravity environments. You could float around the module without friction ... have a toilet with water in it. When there is no gravity, water pulls into beads or globs like JELL-O. In the future, artificial gravity instruments could be devised. With a visit from a space tourist ranging from one to two weeks, we plan to keep our orbiting space hotel in micro-gravity. So expect to float around and have fun doing so There would be ...

Additional database time was 0.035 sec.


Result page: Previous  6  7  8  9  10  11  12  13  14  15  Next 
 
Search in namespaces:

















Powered by Sphinx
Views