Yes. The Space Shuttle Atlantis will be on display at the Kennedy Space Center.
Atlantis is going to the Hubble Space Telescope. This will be the final servicing mission and no spacecraft will travel to Hubble after this.
Going into space. Going into space.
it flys
Space shuttle landings are always planned to occur at the Kennedy Space Center. There are alternative landing sites in readiness as poor weather can prevent the shuttle landing in Florida. Edwards Airforce Base in California is the second choice and is sometimes used. The use of the Edwards facility was discontinued after the new strip was built at the Kennedy faclity. Landings at Edwards required that the shuttle be lifted up, strapped to the back of a specially modified 747, flown to Kennedy, and then offloaded. It was cheaper in the long run to just build the lengthy stip at Kennedy.
In a space shuttle at outer space, you will be going almost 100mp so you will not feel so well when you get out probably
The next space shuttle going into space is the Space Launch System (SLS) Artemis I mission, which is an uncrewed test flight around the Moon.
No, the space shuttle Challenger was not going to the moon. The Challenger mission STS-51L was a planned space shuttle launch to deploy a communications satellite and perform various experiments in low Earth orbit. Tragically, the Challenger disintegrated shortly after liftoff on January 28, 1986.
Discovery is going into a museum.
The Space Shuttle is not capable of going to the moon.
None. The space shuttle is not capable of going to the moon. The only manned spacecraft to go to the moon were the lunar landers of the Apollo missions, which took place before the first space shuttle was built.
Yes. It is harder for a Space Shuttle to break through the Earth's atmosphere when it's going against the rotation of Earth.
Atlantis will no longer be traveling to space unless there is an emergency with the next flight.