100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 million years
The truth:It is unlikely that a Saturn five could create enough velocity to get out of the solar system.If the payload had a Ion thruster in it and allowing that thruster could archive 1/4 light speed and the payload didn't have to stop when it got there:
more than 2572 years.
At the speed of light it would take take just over an hour. By conventional rocket: the Cassini probe took seven years to reach Saturn. Pioneer 11 took 6 years
It is hard to know for definite the actual size of the stars. Betelgeuse would be the star that you are referring to.
That would be the German V-2 short-range ballistic missile. After WWII, Allied forces obtained the blueprints and even some of the scientist for the rocket, and it paved the way for modern rockets. America even used the V-2 as a base for the Saturn V.
That depends on the speed of the spaceship. If it were traveling at the speed of light, which is the maximum speed that any object can reach, it would take 640 years to get there.
Saturn VThe Saturn V was created expressly for the space program. Earlier rockets were adapted to fit the needs of exploration (eg. the Mercury-Redstone combinations), but the power needed to push a craft into orbit required a completely new design. The Saturn V contains 5 rocket engines, each of which had a diameter of 33 feet (if I recall Apollo 13 correctly). So at it's widest point, the rocket would have to be over 100 feet in diameter, creating 7.5 million pounds of thrust--enough to put the spacecraft into orbit along with the next set of engines which would push it off to the moon.If you mean rockets used in wars, then the rocket that would have been a precursor to the Saturn 5 would be the Nazi Vengence rockets, specifically the V2 and the not widely used V3 which I don't think actually got used before they were rendered useless due to the war ending. The V2 had the capability of reaching near space, well out of reach of fighter planes of the time which had the job of trying to shoot them down before they got too high.
on a rocket and blast of in 5,4,3,2,1 or five secends
sending it in a rocket ship how else
—the Saturn v had two stages both parts would burn its engines until the fuel ran out then it would come off the rocket
At the speed of light it would take take just over an hour. By conventional rocket: the Cassini probe took seven years to reach Saturn. Pioneer 11 took 6 years
if they were on a rocket ship or a space craft and they would have to have a oxygen bag so you can breayhe
It is hard to know for definite the actual size of the stars. Betelgeuse would be the star that you are referring to.
9 days
The rocket would be carrying extra dead weight and likely would not have enough fuel to reach its destination.
That would be the German V-2 short-range ballistic missile. After WWII, Allied forces obtained the blueprints and even some of the scientist for the rocket, and it paved the way for modern rockets. America even used the V-2 as a base for the Saturn V.
450 years.
The Saturn 5 booster did most of the work.
Assuming the bus travels at 65 MPH, it would take you approximately 1,441 years to reach Saturn.