rocket
I would call that a Space Shuttle.
The U.S. Space Shuttle rockets into space with the help of booster rockets and it returns to earth as the worlds largest glider. The Russians have a similar shuttle called Boran, but I don''t know if it was ever used.
A rocket is a form of propulsion. If a rocket is used to power an airplane, it is referred to as a rocket-plane, and has wings like an airplane. It the rocket is use to propel a vehicle vertically, which does not need wicgs to provide lift, it is called simply a rocket. Sometimes fins are used to stabilize or guide a rocket in flight, but these are referred to as fins rather than wings.
A rocket goes up once and might also come down once, while a shuttle is built to be reuseable.
The space shuttle Is a type of rocket that lands like an airplane.
-- The gunpowder rocket was invented around 500 BCE. -- The first successful flight of an airplane was in 1903. So the rocket sneaked past the airplane in line by about 2,400 years.
Answer The Space Shuttle is a rocket. By definition, a Rocket is a vehicle that burns gas that it carries with it. Where as, a jet airplane burns the oxygen from the air and is not a rocket. The Rocket when it is launched has a liquid fuel rocket engines at the back end of it. It also has two long, solid fuel rocket engines that separate after launch. But the space shuttle is pulled by a rocket.
There is a rocket.
The X-15 Rocket Plane.
Well that is easy a rocketship because,a rocket has rocket bosters
There is a miniature rocket under the seats and a parachute.
Balloon, helicopter, rocket, etc.