Most of the astronauts were pulled up by helicopter #66.
N.A,S.A used two types of vehicles on the moon, one was hand pulled by the Apollo 14 astronauts, and Apollo15,16, 17 used a solar powered vehicle on the moon.
horses
Ken Mattingly
i believe that the monster things grabbed onto the helicopter and the helicopter pulled too much weight so they fell off into the ocean....
Nothing keeps them from being pulled. Earth's gravity certainly pulls on them.
He brought out the sun every day. He pulled it out. That is what the Greeks believe in.
Apollo was the god who drove the sun across the sky every day.and He drove a golden chariot that was pulled by two gold horses.The chariot pulled the sun.He was also the god of prophecy, healing, and music. He became god of the sun later on, taking the place of Helios.
In Greek mythology, Apollo is the god of the sun, among other things. The sun is associated with Apollo because he was believed to drive the chariot of the sun across the sky each day. So, the sun came to symbolize Apollo's power and divinity.
No but they did have chariots. Apollo the god of light,music,art,and medicine I pulled along the sun every day.
The helicopter that is hovering over a place on the earth is n bound to the earth by the gravitational force of the earth. This gravitational attractive force on the helicopter is directed towards the center of the earth. As the earth rotates around itself the helicopter is pulled along with it. So the point directly below the earth's surface does not get displaced. Thus the helicopter cannot move away from the spot. For the helicopter to get itself free from the gravitational pull of the earth it has to be lifted to a height of millions of kilometers, where it cannot hover because a helicopter requires the presence of air to hover.
A very larg helicopter may be able to take off with an added 50,000 lbs. of weight. A good sized modern train is going to be significantly larger than this. The helicopter's blades would likely give out as they are suddenly reversed if you just "slammed on the brakes" so to speak. If you had the helicopter going at the same speed as the train, and slowled the helicopter down as much as possible, the train would eventually stop if the locomotives were not powering the wheels (it would stop without the helicopter, too, and would be infinitely safer for the helicopter pilot). If the locomotive is powering the wheels, the helicopter's not going to do a whole lot.
In Greek mythology, Apollo did not have a chariot that pulled the sun. The chariot of the sun was typically associated with Helios or other sun deities. Apollo was the god of the sun, light, music, and poetry.