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3 mainly but it can be more or less depending on the rocket
the rocket boosters and the external tank has their own parachute deployed after the separation and a given altitude. As they go down back to earth they are intended to land in the ocean where they will be recovered and put back to service.
Each shuttle used 2 solid-fuel rocket boosters, which were designed to be recovered and re-used.
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The orbiter, the airplane looking part, and the solid rocket boosters are reused. However, the SRBs (solid rocket boosters) have to be completely dismantled and almost totally rebuilt.
3 mainly but it can be more or less depending on the rocket
the rocket boosters and the external tank has their own parachute deployed after the separation and a given altitude. As they go down back to earth they are intended to land in the ocean where they will be recovered and put back to service.
The engines for the space shuttle.
Each shuttle used 2 solid-fuel rocket boosters, which were designed to be recovered and re-used.
use "Shift"
The orbiter, the airplane looking part, and the solid rocket boosters are reused. However, the SRBs (solid rocket boosters) have to be completely dismantled and almost totally rebuilt.
The orbiter, the airplane looking part, and the solid rocket boosters are reused. However, the SRBs (solid rocket boosters) have to be completely dismantled and almost totally rebuilt.
Cause it suck dicks
to beat gravity of the earth
The parachutes will drop from the rocket boosters and land about 140 miles off the coast of Florida in the Atlantic Ocean. Ships will later be sent to retrieve the boosters and carry them back to Cape Canaveral so that they may be reused.
Yes they can, they were sighted 20 million years ago...by you.
Stations are built in space; Shuttles use rocket boosters.