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Displaying 41—50 of 1000 matches for query "Joseph_A._Walker" retrieved in 0.010 sec with these stats:

  • "joseph" found 847 times in 688 documents
  • "a" found 169938 times in 18149 documents
  • "walker" found 425 times in 269 documents



... datastyle = text-align:right; header1 = label1 = data1 = header2 = label2 = Birth Name data2 = Jeffrey A. Hoffman header3 = label3 = Birth Date data3 = Nov 2 1944 header4 = label4 = Birth Place ... Honours Awarded the Amherst College 1963 Porter Prize in Astronomy, 1964 Second Walker Prize in Mathematics, 1965 John Summer Runnells Scholarship Prize, and 1966 ...
... datastyle = text-align:right; header1 = label1 = data1 = header2 = label2 = Birth Name data2 = Judith A. Resnik header3 = label3 = Birth Date data3 = Apr 5 1949 header4 = label4 = Birth Place ... , fellow mission specialists, Steve Hawley and Mike Mullane, and payload specialist Charlie Walker. This was the maiden flight of the orbiter Discovery . During this 7 ...
... spaceflight, or they may be full-time scientist astronauts during their trip. In both cases, a good knowledge of science is important to solving problems and making discoveries. Are missions an ... , and their activities during the trip. The number of missions on a trip varies with both the length of a trip and the number of crewmembers; from as few as one or two tasks during short flights to dozens on long trips. ---- Answer provided by Charles D. Walker, Ph ...
... 's curiosity so that should be kept in mind. For instance, a mission to photograph a storm in the atmosphere might take ten minutes, but the mission to find fossils on ... might take one-quarter of the length of your trip. ---- Answer provided by Charles D. Walker, Ph.D Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to ...
There is always a flight commander who is in charge overall. But there is also a chief science officer, reporting to the commander, who is in charge of the scientific or engineering missions during a trip. ---- Answer provided by Charles D. Walker, Ph.D Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the ...
... would be a company or business. In all cases, someone in charge of trip safety will make the final decision about the trip's missions. ---- Answer provided by Charles D. Walker, Ph ...
A mission will be performed inside the spacecraft unless there is no other way than to ... station is risky and so is done only if necessary. ---- Answer provided by Charles D. Walker, Ph.D Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to ...
... areas of scientific and technical inquiry. Those areas range from astronomy—like, how does a black hole form?—to zeolites—how do we create better chemical reaction catalysts ... planned to answer questions about the rest of the Universe. ---- Answer provided by Charles D. Walker, Ph.D Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to ...
Most missions are to make discoveries in science or engineering. But a few have been planned to help teachers on Earth explain scientific principles—for example " ... activities that take only a few minutes, like playing with spheres of free-floating water and juices, or doing weightless gymnastics themselves. ---- Answer provided by Charles D. Walker, Ph.D Image:K2S ...
... useful to science and industry back on Earth. In one experiment with fire in weightlessness, a new form of burning, or combustion, was discovered. But while we might discover new combinations ... unlikely that there are undiscovered basic elements out in space. ---- Answer provided by Charles D. Walker, Ph.D Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to ...

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