SpaceshipOne is significant as it was the first privately-funded spacecraft to achieve manned spaceflight, reaching suborbital space in 2004. It demonstrated the feasibility of commercial space travel and inspired the development of the private space industry. Its success marked a pivotal moment in aerospace history, paving the way for future ventures like SpaceX and Blue Origin in the quest for sustainable space exploration.
The first spaceship was made in 1957 with the launch of Sputnik 1 by the Soviet Union. It was the first artificial satellite to be put into orbit around the Earth.
Sergei Korolyov invented the first spaceship in Moscow, Russia.
The plural form of the noun 'spaceship' is spaceships.
The first spaceship was launched on October 4, 1957, when the Soviet Union sent Sputnik 1 into space. This event marked the beginning of the space age and opened the door to human exploration beyond Earth.
The first spaceship was launched by the Soviet Union, which is now part of Russia. The spacecraft was called Sputnik 1 and it was launched on October 4, 1957.
3 m/s
The momentum of an object is the product of its mass and velocity. Since both spaceships have a mass of 300 kg, spaceship 1 has a momentum of 0 Ns, and spaceship 2 has a momentum of 1200 Ns. The combined momentum of spaceship 1 and spaceship 2 is 1200 Ns.
The initial speed of spaceship 1 can be calculated using the formula: initial momentum = mass * velocity. Therefore, the initial speed of spaceship 1 would be 6 m/s.
Both spaceships have the same mass and spaceship 1 has an initial momentum magnitude of 600 kg-m/s. Since momentum is conserved in an isolated system, the final momentum of spaceship 1 will still be 600 kg-m/s after any interaction.
2,000 kg-m/s
Multiply mass x velocity for each spaceship. Add the results.
The momentum of each spaceship is given by mass x velocity. Therefore, spaceship 1 has a momentum of 0 kgm/s and spaceship 2 has a momentum of 2000 kgm/s. When combined, the total momentum would be 2000 kg*m/s.
900kg-m/s
1,800 kg-m/s
3 m/s
2,000 kg-m/s
2000