Many different fuels can be used on such a trip. Especially for different purposes and phases of the flight.
For example on the Apollo missions to the moon, the Saturn V rocket used kerosene as fuel on the first stage and cryogenic liquid hydrogen on the upper 2 stages, the service module used monomethylhydrazine as fuel, the lunar module used aerozine 50 as fuel for both descent and assent stages.
It would take significantly more than what can fit in cups to go to the moon. Going to the moon requires a spacecraft and rocket fuel, not sugar.
The space shuttle is able to go to the moon by using a special type of fuel and rises up the earth atmosphere until it overcomes the force of gravity.
Rocket fuel is typically used to propel a spacecraft to the moon. The rockets have powerful engines that burn fuel, producing the necessary thrust to escape Earth's gravity and reach the moon's orbit. The fuel can be a combination of liquid or solid propellants that generate the energy needed for the spacecraft to travel through space.
Apollo 11 had about 25 seconds worth of fuel remaining when it landed on the moon.
Actually its the other way around, if a rocket were to launch off the moon it would take less fuel than if it had launched off of earth. It would take less fuel because the moon has lighter gravity.
you just go to the moon for more fuel
no thers no fuel discovered on moon
After putting fuel in the ship, you go to the moon. The ship crashed and you get to make your own ship. Your can change the design of the ship anytime.
It would take significantly more than what can fit in cups to go to the moon. Going to the moon requires a spacecraft and rocket fuel, not sugar.
The space shuttle is able to go to the moon by using a special type of fuel and rises up the earth atmosphere until it overcomes the force of gravity.
There isn't one you go into space and land on the moon
Rocket fuel is typically used to propel a spacecraft to the moon. The rockets have powerful engines that burn fuel, producing the necessary thrust to escape Earth's gravity and reach the moon's orbit. The fuel can be a combination of liquid or solid propellants that generate the energy needed for the spacecraft to travel through space.
Apollo 11 had about 25 seconds worth of fuel remaining when it landed on the moon.
There is not enough green fuel in the fuel rod to reach the planets, so you will have to go to the Pewter Moon (X-56 Y-52) and build a new spaceship there. (see related question)
Since we can't get human beings past the moon, we need space probes to explore past the moon. We don't have the technology and fuel to build a rocket that travels that far.
yes it did go to the moon
"Nieuwe maan" is a Dutch equivalent of "new moon."