John Glenn was in constant communication with Mission Control during his
brief flight in low-Earth-orbit. Later, he also frequently addressed the people
of Earth via telecommunications circuits from the US Senate chamber.
the earth the clouds and the water!
John Glenn travelled outer space twice. On February 20, 1962, NASA astronaut John Glenn flew the Friendship 7 mission becoming the third American in space and the first American to orbit the Earth circling the earth three times. In October 1998, Senator Glenn returned to space at the age of 77 aboard the space shuttle Discovery.
Yuri Gagarin was the first human to journey into outer space. Alan Shepard was the first American to travel to space. John Glenn was the first American to orbit the Earth.
The moon is the closest thing in outer space to the earth.
yes earth is in outer space so if someones says im gonna go to outer space no there going somewher else in space its because we have gravity so we will not float so yes earth is in outer space.
John Glenn traveled to outer space twice, setting multiple records both times. On his first trip he became the first American to orbit the Earth, and on his second trip, while serving as a US Senator, he became the oldest person to travel to space.
in space
That depends on what you mean by "outer space". The moon is outside the Earth's atmosphere and therfore "in space" but it is orbiting the Earth and therfore hardly "outer".
President John F. Kennedy sent a message to John Glenn while he was in outer space during his historic Friendship 7 mission in 1962. Kennedy's message expressed congratulations and support for Glenn's significant achievement.
Not quite; outer space means space beyond the Earth's atmosphere. The universe includes everything (including the Earth) - so you and I live in the universe, but not in outer space.
People can get to outer space by launching spacecraft using rockets. These rockets provide enough thrust to escape Earth's gravitational pull and reach the boundary between Earth's atmosphere and space, known as the Kármán line. Once there, spacecraft can travel further into outer space to visit other planets, moons, or celestial bodies.
Not in outer space; but it does rain on Earth and Earth is in space so in a sense it does.