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Displaying 121—130 of 1000 matches for query "66._When_you're_on_the_Moon,_can_you_see_Earth" retrieved in 0.024 sec with these stats:

  • "66" found 3026 times in 843 documents
  • "when" found 13064 times in 4048 documents
  • "you" found 35744 times in 1428 documents
  • "re" found 6996 times in 1551 documents
  • "on" found 78455 times in 14289 documents
  • "the" found 506431 times in 20587 documents
  • "moon" found 11511 times in 3952 documents
  • "can" found 11535 times in 3515 documents
  • "see" found 6252 times in 2287 documents
  • "earth" found 21084 times in 7977 documents



When we first encounter life in outer space we will need to be sure it is ... alive because it will be very different. We will touch it, watch it and study the new life as we try to understand how it moves, eats and reproduces. Only after ... too ---- Answer provided by Robby Gaines Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer Image:9781894959421.jpg '''Buy This ...
... so that spaceships will not collide with the debris. Maybe in the future the spacecraft computers will be so sophisticated that they will contain tracking data on all space debris and will project flight paths out so far in time that collisions will be avoided routinely on board the spacecraft. ---- Answer provided by Jon H. Brown Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer ...
... astronaut crewmembers spend most of their time doing required maintenance work on the Shuttle—a situation that will continue until the ISS becomes much more useful as it nears construction completion. ---- Answer provided by Thomas Rogers & Russell Romanella Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer Image:9781894959421.jpg '''Buy This ...
... the satellites. Using the atomic clocks on the satellites and the code transmitted, we can determine when the code left the satellite and the time that it takes the message to arrive at our location. Knowing the speed of light, we can ...
... on the slides easily and without jarring. Such is the splendid apparatus, briefly described, which brings all the ends of the earth together and makes the whole world a public park, the most distant parts of which can ...
... can be tempted to reveal their tricks by, for example, growing them on nutrient-poor hard surfaces. The bacteria you see ... on the right (b). The top pictures show the colony patterns. Each colony is a few inches in size and has more bacteria than the number of people on Earth. The bottom pictures (c) and (d) show the ...
... the 1960s spacecraft flew by Venus and Mars and explored the Earth’s Moon. In the years since increasingly complex spacecraft have journeyed to many des-tinations in the solar system. Twelve Americans walked on the Moon ...
... can further divide these types into specific categories, or sub-categories if you will, although the following are not necessarily in the ... When the propeller was rotated, “air is forced from all sides towards the axis, with counter pressure acting on the ...
... the raging speed of eleven kilometers per second , which would suffice to snatch the machine from the earth's spell, to carry it, as our last illustration shows, out into the immeasurable cosmos - towards the moon ...
... on Earth and on the International Space Station have provided insights into the effects of weightlessness on the human body, information that is vital to human spaceflight and long-term space travel, as "plans for colonization of the Moon ...

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