Search wiki using Sphinx

From The Space Library

Jump to: navigation, search

Displaying 31—40 of 1000 matches for query "38._Are_there_caves_on_the_Moon" retrieved in 0.022 sec with these stats:

  • "38" found 1058 times in 767 documents
  • "are" found 19853 times in 5598 documents
  • "there" found 19716 times in 3479 documents
  • "cave" found 48 times in 37 documents
  • "on" found 78455 times in 14289 documents
  • "the" found 506431 times in 20587 documents
  • "moon" found 11511 times in 3952 documents



... the right equipment and training we can make excellent environments for people to safely live in on the Moon. We already know how to do it. Once we return we will learn by living there. ---- Answer provided by John Spencer Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the ...
... finding smaller and smaller craters. Even Moon rocks and craters have craters on them, often called zap pits. One thing we do want to do on the Moon is count the craters of different sizes, and try to get a date of when they happened. This impact record will tell us a lot about when asteroids have likely hit the ... /For%20Kids/KidstoSpace.html Click here Category:Kids To Space Category:Kids To Space - THE MOON
... live on the Moon or on Mars, we will always have to wear some version of our spacesuit. It may look different than it now looks but it will still have to provide the same ... with the oxygen that we need to breathe and survive. Of course, in space we are in weightlessness—our body weight is zero pounds, and the spacesuit also weighs zero pounds. So the weight of the suit is not a factor. It ...
... on the Moon, and perhaps more than one, but doing so will depend on several factors. One factor is finding useful things to do on the Moon, because we're not doing this just for fun. In the ... small animals and insects. The kinds of activities we seek to undertake on the Moon will influence the design. A base designed solely to provide support to some infrared (IR) telescopes on the Moon will be a lot ...
... down wrong. From a straight physics standpoint, the average adult can jump about 1.5 feet into the air from a standstill here on Earth. On the Moon that would be about ten feet or about seven times as high. What's disorienting is that, because of the lower gravity, while less than a second is spent in the air here on Earth, a full three and a half seconds would be spent in the air on the Moon. A pogo ...
The Moon does have gravity, so a vehicle on the Moon is possible. Motorcycles would have to be greatly altered to handle the special conditions on the Moon. They would need an electric motor and metal tires, and it would be really hard to get on ...
Gravity on the Moon is equal to 5.322 Ft/Sec. That is one-sixth, or ~16 percent the force of gravity on Earth. http://www.nasa.gov/worldbook/moon_worldbook.html (See CDROM) ---- Answer provided ... /For%20Kids/KidstoSpace.html Click here Category:Kids To Space Category:Kids To Space - THE MOON
... live and work on the Moon. In the near future it will be for short periods, but we'll be constantly building and expanding, and eventually we will have people who live on the Moon from birth to death. ---- Answer provided by Thomas Matula, Ph.D. & Kenneth J. Murphy Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to ...
Media:1963-07 Engineering Problems on the Moon AD0422956.pdf Engineering Problems on the Moon July 1963 Category:Publications
... someday be turned into domed habitats. The meteor crater in Arizona is a good example of how a smaller lunar crater would appear to astronauts on the Moon. ---- Answer provided by Thomas Matula, Ph.D. & Kenneth J. Murphy Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by ...

Additional database time was 0.035 sec.


Result page: Previous  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  11  Next 
 
Search in namespaces:

















Powered by Sphinx
Views