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No nation on earth has ever built a rocket launch vehicle with the energy and cargo space that would have been needed to put that much payload in orbit.
How much fuel will be needed in a rocket will depend on the size of the rocket and where it is going. A rocket that will be traveling into space burns a lot of fuel and will need enough to keep it in orbit for teh desired time.
It takes a year or the earth to orbit the sun.
The Space Shuttle is not capable of leaving Earths orbit.
No, nowhere near enough. Moreover, it would pull the moon into a closer orbit - gravity is an attracting force - and eventually causing it to crash into the planet.
No nation on earth has ever built a rocket launch vehicle with the energy and cargo space that would have been needed to put that much payload in orbit.
No one can answer this question until we know more details about how the trip is to be conducted. For example, when NASA launched men to the Moon, they used something called a Hohmann transfer orbit. But recently, the Indian government sent a probe to the Moon by a means that used much less energy than needed for a Hohmann transfer orbit, but which took much more time. So there is no one answer to this question.
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heat is a mesure of energy the more energy the hotter it is so depending on its melting point is how much energy/heat is needed
Potential energy.
The needed energy is 10 calories.
Not much. Of course, the exact amount of energy varies, depending on the sound volume.
potential energy is when something has the ability to use kinetic energy so it really depends on how much energy that something has
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The satellites are usually placed so in an orbit high enough so that they don't lose much movement energy due to atmospheric friction.
How much fuel will be needed in a rocket will depend on the size of the rocket and where it is going. A rocket that will be traveling into space burns a lot of fuel and will need enough to keep it in orbit for teh desired time.