known one nows
115 to 400 miles above the Earth.
Distances don't depend on the specific nature of the phantasy in which you imagine traversing them, and no Space Shuttle was ever capable of traveling to Venus.
Usually within 250 miles
Forces of Motion. As far as I have known, it is when the space shuttle leaves the earth, it is pushed upwards by the opposite side of the shuttle whenerer it is going to leave. Answered by: SAV
More information on Space Shuttlehttp://www.onestopsolver.com/space-shuttle-orbit-flight-path.html
The space station is not too far out of the Earths atmosphere so they just send up a space shuttle!
So far, there have been none.
The space shuttle Atlantis launch July 8, 2011 and landed July 21, 2011 on mission STS-135, the last of the space shuttle program. Following that mission Atlantis was prepared for display at the Kennedy Space Center Visitors Complex not far from the pads where she had been launched on 33 missions.
The space shuttle helped us to be able to go into space and find out lots of info. we did not know. Before we had the space shuttle all we had were telescopes. Telescopes were good but all that they gave us were a picture and then we had to estimate how far away things in the universe were from other things were in the universe. Now that we have the space shuttle we are able to see things that we may not have seen with the telescope. We are also able to see how far away things are from other things
If a space shuttle travels at 17,500 (mph) (highest recorded time so far) well; you work it out!
Approximately 3 hours
A Space Shuttle has never taken a human to the moon.