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Displaying 61—70 of 1000 matches for query "07._On_the_Moon,_would_we_be_able_to_play_football" retrieved in 0.047 sec with these stats:

  • "07" found 1861 times in 1145 documents
  • "on" found 78455 times in 14289 documents
  • "the" found 506431 times in 20587 documents
  • "moon" found 11511 times in 3952 documents
  • "would" found 42637 times in 9226 documents
  • "we" found 51112 times in 4364 documents
  • "be" found 50529 times in 10727 documents
  • "abl" found 3357 times in 1734 documents
  • "to" found 237450 times in 18716 documents
  • "play" found 1080 times in 706 documents
  • "footbal" found 113 times in 83 documents



... would be to have a branch of the International Space University on the Moon. You would have the opportunity to get "up close and personal" with data needed for a lunar research project right from the Moon and then be able to send it back to Earth Research and development would be ...
... To travel to an orbiting space station or hotel would take a few days depending on the destination orbit. This is not the fastest time possible, but time needs to be allowed for the space tourists to become accustomed to the ... to protect us from these effects, holidays in space will be limited to a few months, including the trip home. Of course by then spaceships will have evolved and may be able to ...
... finding useful things to do on the Moon, because we're not doing this just for fun. In the early years support from Earth will be critical, and it will be easy for support to wane among the general public ... some 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 different from one that ...
If we were on a planet that had a day that was longer or shorter than 24 hours, the body clock will probably have to adapt. Fortunately, Mars has a daytime about the same length ... here on Earth. When the astronauts of Apollo 17 stayed three days on the Moon in 1972, they had to close the blinds each time they wanted to sleep, because it stayed bright outside all the time; a day on the Moon ...
... caves on the Moon, but we really haven't seen any direct evidence of them. The long sinuous rilles are formed from collapsed lava tubes, which served as pipelines carrying fresh lava to the front ... photographic evidence seems to point to some uncollapsed sections of rilles, and it's assumed that at some point the lava tunnel moved farther underground. Finding such a tunnel would be very important, ...
The number of mountains on the Moon is unknown, but due to the lack of air and water the mountain ranges on the Moon are very, very old— four or four and a half billion years old—far older than any mountains on Earth ...
... to those on Earth will be played on the Moon. However, there will be one big exception. The low gravity on the Moon means individuals will be able to leap far higher and run much faster than on Earth. Games like baseball and football would ...
... on the Moon in a manner that would formally seek out how to do so peacefully would fulfill the spirit and letter of this law, and would benefit all people throughout the World And it would be of particular importance to the ...
... be that scientist who invents a way to supply oxygen without wearing the spacesuits. Whatever it is, there must be some apparatus that will do that for us because there is no oxygen on the Moon or on ...
... , light energy on the Moon will be a precious resource. There might be an occasional glint of light from any solar power towers at the lunar poles, but most of the activity will be underground. Once we get a ... Book''' http://www.apogeebooks.com/Books/For%20Kids/KidstoSpace.html Click here Category:Kids To Space Category:Kids To Space - THE MOON

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