Yes it can because the planets are out of earths orbit any so are many things.
The space shuttle went from sea level to orbit in about 8 minutes
the astanauts go in the ship and turn on the engine then we enter the earths atmossphere and land i the sea
Satellites get up in to space by being launched in a rocket. Once at the altitude necessary for their mission, they separate from the rocket and then orbit the earth.Different kinds of satellites orbit at different heights above the earth. Weather satellites, GPS satellites, and communications satellites all perform different tasks.
There have been several rockets used to go to, or orbit around, the moon. They've been launched by the US, the USSR (now Russia), China, Japan, and India.Which moon rocket are you referring to, from which country?
This was the Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, who made a complete orbit of the Earth in his Vostok rocket on 12th April 1961. Tragically, he was killed in a jet aircraft crash in March 1968.
If the Sun were larger than Earth's orbit, we'd be inside it. Are we inside it? There you go.
The closer to the equator one builds launch facilities, the lower the thrust required to boost a rocket into orbit. If you stand in the center of a merry-go-round, you feel much less centripetal force than you feel on the edge, when it is spinning at the same rate.
One Year; 365.24 days.
it lets you orbit around space and go back to earth safely
The earth's orbit passes through the orbits of cometary debris which manifest themselves as meteorite showers.
The space shuttle went from sea level to orbit in about 8 minutes
the astanauts go in the ship and turn on the engine then we enter the earths atmossphere and land i the sea
No, the earths orbit is so great that the moon would would half to go at 100,000 mps to alter the orbit of the earth.
the orbit of mars is outside that of the earth's orbit so it can't go between earth and the sun
Go to the man outside and he will ask you if you want to go inside. Click yes and you will be in.
Satellites get up in to space by being launched in a rocket. Once at the altitude necessary for their mission, they separate from the rocket and then orbit the earth.Different kinds of satellites orbit at different heights above the earth. Weather satellites, GPS satellites, and communications satellites all perform different tasks.
There have been several rockets used to go to, or orbit around, the moon. They've been launched by the US, the USSR (now Russia), China, Japan, and India.Which moon rocket are you referring to, from which country?