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Displaying 131—140 of 1000 matches for query "89._Will_there_be_regular_flights_to_the_Moon" retrieved in 0.036 sec with these stats:

  • "89" found 1745 times in 781 documents
  • "will" found 24730 times in 5032 documents
  • "there" found 19716 times in 3479 documents
  • "be" found 50529 times in 10727 documents
  • "regular" found 523 times in 417 documents
  • "flight" found 34726 times in 9544 documents
  • "to" found 237450 times in 18716 documents
  • "the" found 506431 times in 20587 documents
  • "moon" found 11511 times in 3952 documents



... sites. To date, there have been more than 50 flights to the ISS, including flights for assembly, crew rotation and logistical support. The ISS is currently operating with a crew of three. Its assembly will continue through the year 2010. and as it grows, its capabilities will ...
... to study and you would have fun doing experiments to better understand the effects of micro-gravity on your body. It would be important to learn more about this to help prepare for those longer trips to the Moon ...
... to play outside, you would have to be in spacesuits, which would make running, catching and throwing more difficult. Even though there is less gravity on the Moon, you wouldn't be able to throw the ball hard enough to get it in orbit, let alone to another galaxy. ---- Answer provided by US ...
... the planet's atmosphere via a conveyer belt-like space transport system to the Moon. Creation of a subterranean cave or surface dome-enclosed lunar seawater reservoir (lake, ocean) will permit remarkable industrial transformations of the Moon's crust; carbon dioxide is a useful industrial gas, perhaps worthy of bulk transport to the Moon. Abstraction of carbon dioxide gas and ...
... landed on the Moon several years earlier. They removed a camera and returned it to Earth. When the engineers opened the camera they found living and thriving bacteria. The bacteria had traveled from the Earth to the Moon. They survived in space for many years. ---- Answer provided by Robby Gaines Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space ...
... holiday, and at amazing things like the Grand Canyon. Once you leave Earth orbit and head out to the Moon or beyond, though, there are no rest stops on the way ---- Answer provided by Derek Webber Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by ...
... by going around and around the Earth in low Earth orbit (LEO) in a space station for several months at a time. The next big journey, after the return to the Moon, will be to Mars. ---- Answer provided by Derek Webber Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer ...
There are different ways of measuring the Moon. One can measure how wide it is in the sky, what its circumference is, what its mass is, and so forth. Over time we've measured the Moon in all kinds of different ways, even how squishy it is inside (its love number). We know that folks started trying to accurately measure the distance to the Moon about 2,300 ...
The astronauts who have been to the Moon say that up close it is a light gray, almost a cinder color. There are colored glasses on the Moon, as well, including green, orange, and black. The color seems to correlate to the titanium content of the ...
... the principal investigator of NASA's Mini-SAR, watching his radar being launched to the Moon aboard Chandrayaan-1 ), Paul's easy to read essays have followed and reported on the growing upheaval in the space community and the battle being waged for the ideological control of and ...

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