King's Cross St. Pancras is the London Underground (tube) station serving the two National Rail (mainline) termini, King's Cross and St Pancras. All three stations are separate but adjacent.
St Pancras and Kings Cross are two separate main line stations, very close to each other but served by a single underground station hence the name "Kings Cross St Pancras" .
Kings Cross and St Pancras International Stations stand adjacent to one another and share the same Underground Station
Yes
About the same.
Depends by what you mean by "around London". If you mean in London it's only Kings Cross. If you mean from "some miles around London", then add Stevenage (same line as Kings Cross).
The train for Dover Priory doesn't always leave from the same platform. Check the departure board as you enter the station to see which platform the next train leaves from.
268 miles from London Kings Cross by train; roughly the same by road
The Kings Cross fire was on 18 November 1987 and the Windsor Castle fire was on 20 November 1992.
From platform to platform about fifteen minutes on the circle (yellow) or hammersmith and city (pink) lines, which run along the same tracks - i.e. when you're on the platform you can get on the first train and it doesn't matter whether it's a circle or hammersmith and city train. I would suggest allowing an extra ten minutes to find your way to the right platform at kings cross, and to get your bearings at Liverpool St station.
Yes, the orbital effects of the earth`s gravity will affect the ISS the same way as it affects other satellites.
Charing Cross Road is located in the vicinity of central London which travels north of St. Martin-in-the-Fields to St. Giles Circus at an intersection with Oxford Street. There is a nearby railroad station bearing the same name of Charing Cross.
No, the roles of kings stayed the same.
The same as before station.