Maybe someday, but not right now because we don't have the technology.
Yes, it is possible to create a space colony, and there are plans in development for establishing human colonies on other planets or in space habitats. Organizations like NASA and private companies like SpaceX are working on technologies and missions to make space colonization a reality in the future. However, challenges such as sustainability, resource management, and long-term human survival need to be addressed.
There were six manned Mercury missions, between 1961 and 1963, which were part of the United States' first human spaceflight program. These missions aimed to prove human spaceflight was possible and lay the foundation for future space missions.
A possible outcome is an element of the outcome space. All possible outcomes make up the outcome space.
Yes, space travel to Mercury is possible, but it is challenging due to the planet's close proximity to the Sun and extreme temperatures. Several spacecraft have been sent to Mercury, such as NASA's MESSENGER and the European Space Agency's BepiColombo missions. These missions have provided valuable insights into the planet's characteristics and helped advance our understanding of the solar system.
No, it is not. Jupiter has no solid surface on which we could build a colony, and the planet's violent winds would make it impossible to safely maintain a floating colony.
Suppose so, but the mercury would fall, instead of rising with temperature increase.
How did Newton originally propose to launch things into space?
Yes, The mercury level would drop as the temperature increased.
It's not possible for anyone who needs to ask the question.On a very small and limited scale nuclear engineers could hypothetically do so; they just need to induce the mercury nuclei to fission in precisely the right way. However, it would be much easier and cost much much less to just go out and buy silver instead. You could even offset the cost of the silver by SELLING the mercury.
They are too big and heavy for it to be possible to launch them into space.
There is no answer to this question because as of 2010 it is not possible to make that trip.
Mercury expands as it cools. Mercury is placed within the bulb at the lower end of a glass tube so that, as the temperature decreases, the mercury may expand within the tube at a regular rate to make judging the temperature possible. Edit By Rouefever: Mercury expands as it is heated, not cooled, like many other substances. Cooling Mercury will make it contract, and then solidify (or freeze).