Search wiki using Sphinx

From The Space Library

Jump to: navigation, search

Displaying 21—30 of 1000 matches for query "65._Can_you_see_constellations_from_the_Moon" retrieved in 0.022 sec with these stats:

  • "65" found 4071 times in 1155 documents
  • "can" found 11535 times in 3515 documents
  • "you" found 35744 times in 1428 documents
  • "see" found 6252 times in 2287 documents
  • "constel" found 544 times in 353 documents
  • "from" found 51787 times in 14609 documents
  • "the" found 506431 times in 20587 documents
  • "moon" found 11511 times in 3952 documents



... the samples from the Moon studied so far, and there are unlikely to be any, that we understand as life, given the almost complete lack of water on the Moon. Interestingly, when Apollo astronauts returned a camera from ...
... , Moon's surface on average has an albedo, or reflectance of light, similar to that of charcoal. All light that we see from the Moon is either sunlight bouncing off the Moon and into our eyes (the bright part of a crescent Moon), or sunlight bouncing off the Earth, then the Moon and back into our eyes (the dim part of a crescent Moon ...
... . From EML-1 we can get to anywhere on the Moon's surface at any time. Going to the Moon by way of a LEO station and EML-1 would take about a week—the same length of time it used to take aircraft to travel across the Pacific Ocean—but we could go anywhere on the Moon. Traveling from a LEO orbit to a LLO with a TLI and then down to the Moon's surface would ...
... the atmosphere the Moon appears to be a grayish color like the astronauts observed when they traveled to it. This is the true color of the Moon since there is no atmosphere to absorb the light from the Moon reaching the eyes of the ...
... large object like the Moon. We've found rocks from the Moon and Mars on Earth, usually in Antarctica or the Sahara desert, so there are almost certainly rocks from Mars and the Earth on our Moon. The question is where they're hidden. Rocks from Venus ...
... regolith returned from the Moon, but a lot of things like nitrogen and carbon—fertilizer—had to be added to help the plants grow. Plants would also need to be protected from the vacuum, radiation and extreme temperature changes. ---- Answer provided by Thomas Matula, Ph.D. & Kenneth J. Murphy Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to ...
Any water that might happen to escape into the lunar environment will have enough energy to escape from the Moon's gravity and will never return as snow. ---- Answer provided by Thomas Matula, Ph.D. & Kenneth J. Murphy Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids ...
... -6_Day_Off_Xmas.mp4 Category:Movie Books Live TV From the Moon by Dwight Steven-Boniecki and Live TV From Orbit by Dwight Steven-Boniecki Image:9781926592169.jpg '''Buy ...
... is the subject of countless films and television programmes, both fact and fiction, many using original footage from space. Astronauts have broadcast live from the Moon, and TV journalists have travelled to Mir, similar to the use of exotic terrestrial locations for filming by professional film crews. Although prohibitively expensive at the moment, the ...
... can only have weight in a gravity field, like on the Earth or on the Moon. The Moon is in the gravitational sphere of influence of the ... you don't have as much traction with the ground to force a change in your velocity vector. Remember that when you go running down the moonbase corridors The Moon ... Murphy Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by ...

Additional database time was 0.034 sec.


Result page: 1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  Next 
 
Search in namespaces:

















Powered by Sphinx
Views