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You use it to give the rocket a extra boost into space and make sure it gets into orbit, without it space ships would be falling back to earth!
What happens to Solar Energy is that some of it gets absorbed into air, land and water while the rest gets reflected back to space.
Theoreticly, it gets weaker.
All satellites today get into orbit by riding on a rocket or by riding in the cargo bay of the Space Shuttle. Several countries and businesses have rocket launch capabilities, and satellites as large as several tons make it safely into orbit on a regular basis. For most satellite launches, the scheduled launch rocket is aimed straight up at first. This gets the rocket through the thickest part of the atmosphere most quickly and best minimizes fuel consumption.
No working space shuttle has been replaced yet.
with a rocket ship and a space suit
yes, a rocket does have a engine. the engine is the horse power to a rocket that gets it to go... and keep going... and keep going. as long as it has a good engine then it would be a pretty long ride in to space.
the rocket will never even get close enough the sun because it will melt because the heat from the sun is too strong.
You use it to give the rocket a extra boost into space and make sure it gets into orbit, without it space ships would be falling back to earth!
it gets cooler when you get closer to outer space
Using thousands of pounds of rocket fluid. Most of the rocket fuel is used in take off, because of air resistance caused by the Earths atmosphere. There is no air resistance in space so once an object gets move, it'll stay moving.
It gets chases around until it gets caught
it gets denser
What happens to Solar Energy is that some of it gets absorbed into air, land and water while the rest gets reflected back to space.
What happens to Solar Energy is that some of it gets absorbed into air, land and water while the rest gets reflected back to space.
What happens to Solar Energy is that some of it gets absorbed into air, land and water while the rest gets reflected back to space.
Theoreticly, it gets weaker.