no they are not
The woman entered the tiny, claustraphobic elevator, a part of the 1940's building that had not yet been renovated.
The extra tension depends not on the velocity of the elevator, but on its acceleration.
A 'Space Elevator' is a construciton that ties a satelite in synchronous orbit physically to the the ground over which it orbits. This location is about 36,000 kilometers high. Elevators would carry people and cargo up and down. Nobody will climb up. There are tremendous problems in creating such a machine. These include the weight of the connection. 36,000 Km of anything strong enough to carry freight will weigh a lot. The cost of construction and maintenance will be huge as well. It is not clear what benefits might result from this object that would make it worthwile. One problem that humans have not yet overcome is the tens of thousands of junk objects which space programs have left behind in orbit. These are traveilng at 17,000 miles per hour. Some are as large as third stage boosters. Some are as small as Hasselblad Cameras, or nuts and bolts. Whatever their size, if they hit the Space Elevator, they will do unacceptable damage. Until a way to clean up the mess we have orbiting the Earth is developed, it will not be safe to construct a Space Elevator.
The Shard Building will be the tallest (not yet complete).
on airplanes yes... in space sort of... if you had a jet pack... but sadly people can't fly like birds yet. =(
Pluto is one such planet that has not yet been reached by a space probe.
before anything it would be NASA. but there were no people yet to land on Mars.
many people have gone ot mars at canada. they go to there and back in a matter of years there have been many insodents that ocure in space like explosions and fires in the space shttles and this is a lode of rubbish so dont coppy it
there is no last space ship yet 2099
no
to bring the christian message to those who had not yet found god, (still is).
Most people in Hong Kong live in small apartments in tower blocks or skyscrapers, to make the most of the limited space on the ground.