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Displaying 11—20 of 1000 matches for query "05._How_many_hours_would_it_take_to_go_to_the_Moon_and_back" retrieved in 0.072 sec with these stats:

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  • "moon" found 11511 times in 3952 documents
  • "and" found 284902 times in 19361 documents
  • "back" found 7612 times in 1894 documents



The type of spacecraft propulsion will strongly affect the time it would take to reach the other planets. But assuming current methods and the basics of trajectory design it would take about nine months to get to Mars, the nearest planet. To reach Mercury it would take 6 months; Venus, about 9.5 months; Jupiter, about 5 years; Saturn, 13 years; Uranus, 34 years; Neptune, 60 years; and ...
For Number Two it's not so simple. On Skylab and the Shuttle there is a commode seat and the user's bottom must be held onto the seat or you'll float off. On Skylab ... on the top of the thighs to keep you down on the potty seat. Both systems work well and, in both cases, airflow is directed in just the right way to cause the solid waste to settle toward the collector ...
... to fly to the Moon, it would take you about three to four days to reach it, and then you would want to spend some time there before your return. If you were going to Mars, it would take up to eight months to ...
... the Earth could be reached in a matter of hours. To reach hotels on the Moon, it would take a couple of days. Our first space modules will be parked at the lower Earth orbit, approximately 185 to ... docks with the ISS usually about 40 hours after launch. ---- Answer provided by Robert T. Bigelow Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by ...
We hope to launch the New Horizons spacecraft to Pluto in January 2006, and with luck we'll get to Pluto nine and one-half years later, in July 2015. The journey might take a couple of years longer, depending on the ...
How long it takes to get to a planet depends on what path we take to get there and how fast we are traveling. The Voyager 1 probe, launched in September of 1977, arrived at Jupiter in March of 1979, thus traveling for a year and six months. The Pioneer ...
The only spacecraft to ever visit Neptune was Voyager 2. Even traveling at speeds of over 35,000 miles per hour (mph), it took this robotic craft 12 years to reach the planet Neptune. ---- Answer provided by Laura Peckyno & Robert Peckyno Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space ...
... have to adapt to the conditions of weightlessness, to seeing lots of sunrises and sunsets, to eating astronaut foods, and to sleeping without a bed It sometimes takes a day or so to get the hang of it, but then as you would expect, it seems great fun ---- Answer provided by Derek Webber & Capt. USN (Ret.) William Readdy Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and ...
... and supplies would not have to travel too long to reach it. In that case it would take about the same time to reach as the ISS— about two days. ---- Answer provided by Hazel McAndrews Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and ...
... Universe. Because the distances are so great in our Universe, we use the speed of light to call out distances to the very edge of our observable Universe in light years, which is how far light ... the Universe, you would also say that since there are no boundaries to space, there can be no defined end of space. ---- Answer provided by Jim Zebrowski Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and ...

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