It should, it's air tight. An Aircraft carrier floats and it's hugh. Any rocket scientists out there?
Yes- everything floats in space
Well I think it would all just float in tiny particles or just disappear!
Can it land in the ocean... well, yes, but not without probably killing all the occupants and breaking up. It's designed to land on a (very long) landing strip and not on water. There's talk that the space shuttle replacement may be designed to land on water.
The Space Shuttle uses fuel cells to produce electricity. The hydrogen (H2) is burned with the oxygen (O2) to produce clean water (H2O). The heat is used to produce the electricity. The fresh water is then used by the crew or transfered to the International Space Station for drinking and showering. The Apollo Service Modules used a similar system for power and water.
They carry the satilight food clothing water and all that plus the crewRead more: What_kind_of_cargo_do_they_carry_in_a_space_shuttle
By packing a lot of food, water, and fuel? And sometimes just to float around to save fuel.
no because it comes in bubbles that float,for example if I opened a bottle of water there it would float!
through straws or else the water would float around
food, water, and equipment
The Space Shuttle Main Engines burn Hydrogen and Oxygen. The byproduct of this reaction is water. The formula would be: 2H2 + O2 = 2H20 + energy
Yes- everything floats in space
It doesn't. It lands on a runway.
A whole chili pepper contains an air space, so will float on water.
A whole chili pepper contains an air space, so will float on water.
Living in space is different from living on earth because on the space you float and there is no people you can talk to. Also because if we would have the same things as the space we would be floating .As you can see that's why is different.Sincerly:Nancy.m6 Grader
to help it to float on water.
Its surface tension hold it in a logical shape (why is a bubble spherical?)