Yes, given clear air and few clouds.
The white smoke seen during a shuttle launch is caused by the ignition of the solid rocket boosters. It consists of exhaust gases and steam produced by the burning of solid propellant.
A space shuttle launch can typically be seen from about 30-50 miles away, depending on atmospheric conditions and visibility. However, large rockets or unique lighting effects might make them visible from even further distances.
Discovery was the next shuttle to launch. Over 2 years later.
The first shuttle launch was April 12, 1981. It was called STS-1
The latest shuttle launch took place on July 8, 2011, which was the final launch of the Space Shuttle Atlantis (STS-135) mission.
The white smoke seen during a shuttle launch is caused by the ignition of the solid rocket boosters. It consists of exhaust gases and steam produced by the burning of solid propellant.
The final shuttle launch takes place in July 2011.
A space shuttle launch can typically be seen from about 30-50 miles away, depending on atmospheric conditions and visibility. However, large rockets or unique lighting effects might make them visible from even further distances.
The first Space shuttle to launch was Columbia in April of 1981
Discovery was the next shuttle to launch. Over 2 years later.
The first shuttle launch was April 12, 1981. It was called STS-1
Launch Pad - it is shot off to space vertically with SRB (solid rocket boosters) - havent you seen om TV - shuttle being launched??
A shuttle launch does not create energy. Instead, it expends stored energy from its fuel sources to propel the shuttle into space.
Space Shuttle Atlantis was the last space shuttle to launch at 11:29 a.m. EDT, on July 8, 2011.
The people on nasa's first shuttle launch were Robert L. Crippen and John W. Young.
the person that wants to launch a space shuttle, a space company like NASA or the government
The latest shuttle launch took place on July 8, 2011, which was the final launch of the Space Shuttle Atlantis (STS-135) mission.