The big engines never ran in orbit. The shuttle coasts. Occasionally, adjustments are made by small thrusters, called RCS thrusters (RCS: Reaction Control System). They essentially squirt compressed gas into space, so they're not really "engines" as you would know them. Do they make noise?
Sounds we hear on earth are carried into our ears essentially as the vibration of the air around us. So inside the shuttle, where there is air to vibrate, you'll hear it. But out in space?
Technically, you could say Yes, as low earth orbit isn't a perfect vacuum. Practically, we would say no, because theres so little atmosphere, there isn't enough to vibrate and carry the sound. This quickly becomes a philosophical point.
Weightlessness
Weightlessness
Weightlessness
The external tank
The Space Shuttle does not go to the moon. It only orbits the Earth.
The orbiter.
The external tank
Weightlessness
Weightlessness
Weightlessness
The Space Shuttle does not go to the moon. It only orbits the Earth.
200
No, the space shuttle was designed for low earth orbit and generally orbits within 200-300 nautical miles of Earth.
Combination of gravity and the shuttle's inertia creates a curved path parallel to Earth's surface.
Answer The speed in orbit is around 17500 miles an hour.
The space shuttle orbits the earth at 18700 miles per hour at a height of 350 miles above the Earth.
The space shuttle discovery and any other space shuttle for that manner is only designed to orbit Earth. The space shuttle does not have enough fuel or produce enough energy to leave Earths gravitational pull. The only manned spacecraft to do so was the Saturn V rocket, built by Whener Von Braun during the 1960's.