"Houston, we are venting something out into space. I can see it outside of window 1 right now. It's definatly a gas of some sort. It's gotta be the oxygen."
Jim Lovell famously reported, "Houston, we have a problem" during the Apollo 13 mission. The problem was an oxygen tank explosion that disabled the spacecraft and put the crew in danger.
He answers, "Imagine if Christopher Columbus had come back from the New World, and no one returned in his footsteps."
You can say "Il faisait sombre dehors" in French to express that it was dark outside.
Nobody, unfortunately. About 200,000 miles from Earth, the Command and Service Module suffered two dangerous explosions that "crippled" the spacecraft configuration. Jim Lovell, Fred Haise and Jack Swigert WERE brought safely back to Earth, though on April 17th, 1970. Needless to say, the landing part of the mission was aborted and their experience was limited to a simple fly by behind the Moon. Lovell, Haise and Swigert, do, however, hold the "distance from Earth" traveled record as their craft passed 136 miles behind the far side of the Moon. Much further than the average 60 mile orbit that the average Apollo mission would make.
Space is a place of extremes -- extremely hot or extremely cold. It's kind of hard to talk about the temperature outside in space because there has to be something there in order to measure it. On Earth, when you say what's the temperature outside you're really asking what's the temperature of the air outside. There is no air in space -- the area outside the spacecraft is essentially empty -- a void or vacuum. If you put an object outside it would get blazing hot or extremely cold, depending on whether it was on the side of the station facing the sun or in the shaded side. A thermometer on the sunny side would reach something like 250 degrees F (121 C), while a thermometer on the dark side would plunge to something like minus 250 degrees F (-157 C).
Jim Lovell famously reported, "Houston, we have a problem" during the Apollo 13 mission. The problem was an oxygen tank explosion that disabled the spacecraft and put the crew in danger.
This is a personal opinion, i would say Jim Lovell, as he brought the damaged Apollo 13 back.
Jim is about 5'8" I would say.
Jim say the little birds said it was going to rain.
In Hawaiian, the name "Jim" can be translated as "Himo."
Jim bienvenida a su amor
Jim works with me and Kim.
Jim is the same. However, James is Jacques.
밖에 서 = outside
outside - 外 (Wài)
Jaime, Jaimito
say say you are way way to a bay bay