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Displaying 81—90 of 1000 matches for query "Engineering_Problems_on_the_Moon_July_1963" retrieved in 0.025 sec with these stats:

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  • "moon" found 11511 times in 3952 documents
  • "juli" found 10829 times in 5037 documents
  • "1963" found 13776 times in 998 documents



The astronauts who have been to the Moon say that up close it is a light gray, almost a cinder color. There are colored glasses on the Moon, as well, including green, orange, and black. The color seems to correlate to the titanium content of the glass. The Moon is covered in craters, mountains, valleys and great plains, called Maria. Since the Moon has ...
... 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 astronauts ... 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, with greenhouses, home cooking will ...
... CONQUEST OF THE MOON''' by Ryan, C. (ed) ''New York, 1953: Viking Press, 126 pages, $4.50'' Characterized by ... Braun, W. Ley, and F. L. Whipple on space stations, moonships, "personnel spheres," the Moon voyage, the establishment of bases on the Moon, lunar exploration, and the Moon-Earth trip. Extracted from the 1962 Publication ''Annotated Bibliography of Space Science ...
... left special instruments on the Moon, and a special laser at the McDonald Observatory in western Texas bounces a laser off these instruments. Careful measurement of the results has shown us that the Moon is moving slowly away from us, at about 1.5 inches per year. http://www.nasa.gov/worldbook/moon_worldbook.html (See ...
... the Earth. Over time this material collected and cooled and created the Moon. Since then it has been hit many, many times, by comets and asteroids, and most of that material will remain on the Moon. Sometimes the impact is big enough ...
... be living inside the Moon, at least at first. Since there is no atmosphere or magnetic field on the Moon we'll need to put something in the way of cosmic rays and the solar wind. Regolith ... /For%20Kids/KidstoSpace.html Click here Category:Kids To Space Category:Kids To Space - THE MOON
... than dust and sand on Earth. Because of the lower gravity the dust is able to have much steeper slopes then on Earth which is part of why the pictures of the footprints on the Moon show such sharp edges. ---- Answer provided by Thomas Matula, Ph.D. & Kenneth J. Murphy Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids ...
... to the Moon. Two missions orbited the Moon without landing— Apollo 8 and Apollo 10 . One mission went around the Moon without going into orbit or landing— Apollo 13 , and six missions have landed on the Moon ... /For%20Kids/KidstoSpace.html Click here Category:Kids To Space Category:Kids To Space - THE MOON
... space. In the context of pollution rendering a place unfit for human habitation, this will be true only to the extent that we've established a human presence. People on the Moon will learn to recycle and not waste in order to avoid pollution of their living environment. In the context of ...
... companion volume (Project Apollo - The Test Program) the moon landings of the 1960's and 70's would not have been possible without an improbable chain of events culminating in the exhortation of a young ... has colorized, like the panorama of Dave Scott working at the rover on the slopes of Hadley Delta peak. No Apollo fan should miss this book -- Andrew Chaikin , author of "A Man on the Moon". "Attractive and ...

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