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Displaying 81—90 of 1000 matches for query "14._Will_there_be_crashes_or_will_there_be_air_traffic_control_facilities" retrieved in 0.032 sec with these stats:

  • "14" found 34196 times in 13429 documents
  • "will" found 24730 times in 5032 documents
  • "there" found 19716 times in 3479 documents
  • "be" found 50529 times in 10727 documents
  • "crash" found 798 times in 549 documents
  • "or" found 21946 times in 6355 documents
  • "air" found 13790 times in 5922 documents
  • "traffic" found 769 times in 485 documents
  • "control" found 9709 times in 4121 documents
  • "facil" found 5278 times in 2950 documents



... ground, it is important to review the procedures as to what our specific actions would be in an emergency. ---- Answer provided by Futron Corporation Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer ...
The Soyuz spacecraft on the ISS may be considered similar to a lifeboat. ---- Answer provided by Futron Corporation Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question ...
... a very long distance, and the space stations move relative to the Moon. It would be like trying to build a moving sidewalk from your house to a flying airplane. ---- Answer ...
Well, maybe a TV, but no swimming pool In the weightlessness of space the water would just float around and get into things and cause trouble. Astronauts always drink liquids through straws to keep the liquids from getting loose and causing problems. ---- Answer provided by Jon H. Brown Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie ...
... will be different in space. Besides the basic accommodations like enough water, food and air, there will be private quarters for guests to sleep, read e-mails, and write. There will be private toilets and body washing facilities ... be used. Drinking must be done through a straw with a valve to control ...
... engines can be shut off when desired velocity and altitude conditions are reached or if emergency conditions demand thrust termination. Liquid rockets can be designed to be throttled, to reduce or control the ... solar panels, and there are plans to someday use nuclear reactors to supply the propulsion power required. Sunlight availability in the vicinity of the Earth will provide these thrusters ...
... will have to learn how to walk in the hotel by planning the trip and pushing off a wall, a piece of equipment or apparatus. The space hotel will be small and noisy, the air and temperature have to be moved around mechanically and odors will have to be filtered out. All of this creates noise. Space hotels will need ...
The safety part will be mandatory but could be done in less than a day. The courses that teach you what to do when you are in space will be longer—anywhere from a day to a week—and will step you through what to expect on launch, in space and on landing. There are longer classes ...
... the next stop would likely be low lunar orbit (LLO) or a station at the balance, or Lagrange, point between the Earth and Moon (EML-1), and from there to the lunar surface. So the first part of the trip, from Earth to orbit, is not likely to be ...
... trip to orbit, or probably three to four weeks for trips that go all the way to the Moon. The Moon has one-sixth of Earth gravity, which will be fun and less awkward than zero-gravity in orbit, but it also has a dust problem. Keeping the inside of lunar homes and offices clean will be very difficult because lunar dust clings to spacesuits and can't be removed by simple brushing. ---- Answer provided by David Gump ...

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