Well for starters we are actually able to get into space with a space shuttle...
they would travel in a space shuttle
The space shuttle travels in the thermosphere layer of the atmosphere, which is the layer located above the mesosphere. This layer is where temperatures can reach very high levels due to its proximity to space.
The space shuttle does not travel to the moon. The Apollo missions used spacecraft, not space shuttles, to travel to the moon. It took the Apollo missions around 3 days to travel from Earth to the moon.
Before the space shuttle, spacecraft such as the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo programs were used to travel in space. These spacecraft were designed for specific missions like orbital flights, spacewalks, and moon landings.
There were two men on the first Space Shuttle flight -- John W. Young and Robert Crippen
Yes! As far as space travel goes, Shuttles are basically our only way, at the moment, to travel far distances in the endless reaches of space. Apart from rockets which take take us from earth into space, and carry the heavy loads, shuttles are what are used mainly.
The Space Shuttle can travel over 17,500 MPH
they would travel in a space shuttle
No. The space shuttle can only reach low Earth orbit.
yes.. by space shuttle
The space shuttle travels in the thermosphere layer of the atmosphere, which is the layer located above the mesosphere. This layer is where temperatures can reach very high levels due to its proximity to space.
Space Cowboys (2000) is one of the best examples of space shuttle travel.
The space shuttle does not travel to the moon. The Apollo missions used spacecraft, not space shuttles, to travel to the moon. It took the Apollo missions around 3 days to travel from Earth to the moon.
The space shuttle flies into space. It can travel to different planets.
* shuttle
No
Before the space shuttle, spacecraft such as the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo programs were used to travel in space. These spacecraft were designed for specific missions like orbital flights, spacewalks, and moon landings.