Earth's Atmosphere
Moving through the Earth's atmospheric layers will definitely be "hot". It will be so hot that it would be fatal to anyone who is not well-protected not just in a space capsule rocket but also a heat-insulated body suit.
Space itselfDepends on relative distance and angle-of-attack or approach of the SUN, the heat source in the Solar system. Again, besides the fact you'd need oxygen, you'd need a suit to protect you from temperature extremes, both cold and hot.
Trivia
The Sun can and is used to recharge batteries via banks of photoelectric cells. there being no problems with weather ( such as precipitation) or wind-resistance in Interplanetary space. The space program was/is a huge boom for the whole solar-battery industry as was widely advertised in the sixties (and now International rectifier -- one of the better models of experimental photocells. Photo cells are used- on such and such a satellite. Craft operating beyond Jupiter would require atomic batteries for electrical service- as the solar energy is too dim at this distance to recharge the batteries. From Sub-surface to space- Batteries are empowered! Pun intended.
The boundary between Earth's atmosphere and outer space is defined by the Kármán line, which is at an altitude of 100 kilometers (62 miles) above sea level. To officially leave Earth's atmosphere and reach space, you would need to travel at least this distance vertically.
It will go to space and come back to earth in 2 years.
No, a space shuttle travels at a speed of about 17,500 miles per hour in space, not in Earth's atmosphere. When entering the atmosphere, it slows down significantly to prevent overheating due to air resistance.
A spacecraft travelling at approximately 25,000 miles per hour can escape Earth's orbit. This speed is known as the escape velocity and allows the spacecraft to overcome the gravitational pull of the Earth.
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.
No, it won't. Air is pulled in atmosphere by earth's gravity.
Yes only rockets go through here after it is outer space that is why it is called the exosphere because your exiting earths atmosphere.
The boundary between Earth's atmosphere and outer space is defined by the Kármán line, which is at an altitude of 100 kilometers (62 miles) above sea level. To officially leave Earth's atmosphere and reach space, you would need to travel at least this distance vertically.
the earths core is never hot it is always going to be hot the lower you go the hoter it gets.p.s. your welcome :) say thank you ;)
As one gets above Earth's atmosphere, the sky transitions from a gradient of blue to black due to the scattering of sunlight by the atmosphere. Beyond the atmosphere, the sky appears completely black as there is no atmosphere to scatter sunlight, revealing the vast darkness of space.
friction, they are going very fast through the atmosphere and it is generation a lot of heat
No, the earth's atmosphere reflects and absorbs x-rays, so they do not make it to the surface.
To break the atmosphere and go into space easily.
600km
stratosphere
The air becomes less dense, the higher you go. And generally, the temperature gets colder until you reach the thermosphere, which is the hottest part of Earths atmosphere.
the earth is in space but their are layers of atmosphere surrounding us from the fatal environment of space air-go (therefore) we must break free of the atmosphere to get to space. it's a hard concept to understand