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Displaying 61—70 of 1000 matches for query "05._How_many_hours_would_it_take_to_go_to_the_Moon_and_back" retrieved in 0.066 sec with these stats:

  • "05" found 1766 times in 1000 documents
  • "how" found 9066 times in 2689 documents
  • "mani" found 5437 times in 2627 documents
  • "hour" found 5478 times in 2538 documents
  • "would" found 42637 times in 9226 documents
  • "it" found 81427 times in 11675 documents
  • "take" found 6263 times in 2782 documents
  • "to" found 237450 times in 18716 documents
  • "go" found 15794 times in 2028 documents
  • "the" found 506431 times in 20587 documents
  • "moon" found 11511 times in 3952 documents
  • "and" found 284902 times in 19361 documents
  • "back" found 7612 times in 1894 documents



What's going to be important on the Moon in the early days is to have food that creates a minimal amount of waste excretion, with little smell. This was exactly the kind of diet that the Apollo ... from the meal. Astronauts enjoy a wide variety of pre-prepared meals, and in the beginning it's likely we'll just be making more of them for shipment to the Moon. Once we get established on the Moon ...
The ISS has had three space tourists so far. They have had to train with the crew to learn about the systems and avoid incidences. If it were not safe for children, they would not allow them to go to space hotels. Just as they prepared the tourists, they will ...
... VOYAGES TO THE MOON''' by Nicholson, M. ''New York, 1948: Macmillan Co., 297 pages, $1.75 (1960 edition)'' This is a literary and historical book on the evolution of fictional ideas on how man could travel to the Moon. It includes accounts of schemes developed by Cicero, Lucian, Plutarch, Milton, and others. Reprinted in 1960. Extracted from the 1962 ...
... the surface of the Earth. A stable and viable Earth-space economy has to be centred upon the Moon. The technological, engineering and scientific requirements and a possible development scenario are discussed briefly and some of the wider implications are noted. '''To ...
For the first two minutes and five seconds, the boosters cause a great deal of vibration and it is hard to read the displays. Once the boosters leave, sometimes with a jolt, it is like sitting on a big electric motor. The spacecraft ...
... . You pull yourself from point to point by using your arms and pulling on the structure to get you moving in the correct direction, and then you float to where you want to go. It's really like flying, not like swimming. ---- Answer provided by Byron Lichtenberg, Ph.D. Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the ...
... to the Moon. Due to favourable thruster and power subsystem performance, and an efficient orbital transfer strategy, the SMART-1 mission trajectory was fine tuned in flight to produce a shorter transfer time, an improved lunar science orbit and ...
... TO THE MOON''' by Bergaust, E. and S. Hull ''Princeton (New Jersey), 1958: D. van Nostrand Co., Inc., 220 pages, $5.95'' Rocket to the Moon gives a general coverage of plans and programs designed to assure the conquest of the Moon, a history of lunar voyages in the fictional literature, a résumé of knowledge of the Moon, lunar ...
The time it takes to travel from any point in space to another point is completely dependent upon the form of propulsion used. For astronauts these days the Shuttle is used. This fires liquid propellant from nozzles and can increase its speed by small amounts but this is only suitable for ferrying astronauts and equipment to the Space Station and back again. Between an orbiting hotel and the Moon, which is about 236,000 miles from Earth, it would take ...
Each orbit takes the ISS roughly 25,000 miles. When the early explorers used to go around the Earth in their galleons, it took them years to get back to their starting point. Astronauts now do it in an hour and a half. ---- Answer provided by Derek Webber Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and ...

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