no there very expencive
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Apollo 11 used the Saturn V rocket to launch into space. The Saturn V was a three-stage rocket developed specifically for the Apollo program by NASA. It remains the largest and most powerful rocket ever built.
The Space Launch System (SLS) is currently NASA's tallest rocket. It is designed to be the most powerful rocket ever built and is intended to launch astronauts on missions to deep space, including Mars.
Mr. Tim Mc Grath from Pakistan
The first person to study in detail the use of rockets for spaceflight was the Russian schoolteacher and mathematician Konstantin Tsiolkovsky. There is no one first successful launch but instead many notible milestone launches in rocket development. -Solid fueled rockets using gunpowder can be traced back to the 13th century. Solid fuel rockets that were effective on the battle field were demonstrated early in the 19th century. -Robert Goddard designed, built and launched the first liquid fueled rocket in 1926. The fuel was gasoline with liquid oxygen used as the oxidizer. It flew less than 100 feet but it functioned as designed and became the foundation for many of todays liquid fueled rockets from the Saturn V to the space shuttle's main engines. -The German liquid fueled V2 was the first large successful rocket to loft a sizable warhead out of the atmosphere on a ballistic tragectory. It's first successful launch occurred in 1942. -1st successful rocket launch to achieve the 17,500 MPH required for continuous orbit around the earth was a Soviet Sputnik rocket which carried the Sputnik 1 satellite to low earth orbit in October 1957. -1st successful rocket launch of a human being occured on April 12, 1961. Yuri Gargarin was carried to low earth orbit. -1st succussful rocket launch to reach the 25,000 MPH required to escape the earths gravity was the Soviet probe Luna 1 launched in 1959.
The Germans, during WWII. Robert hutchings goddard. ........(D.V.S)
You have to have done all the tasks and have built the rocket, you don't actually go in it yourself Vince does. He then asks you to go around the different islands finding figurines for him. Hope this helps. :)
Yes, water temperature can affect how fast a rocket launches. Warmer water will create more steam and pressure, potentially causing the rocket to launch faster compared to colder water. However, other factors such as the design of the rocket and the amount of pressure built up also play a significant role in determining the launch speed.
You use a Launch Lug, Parachute, Removable Solid Rocket Engine, Parachute Lines, Fins, Body Tubes, Nose Cone Payload (removable), Engine Mount (fixed), Shock cord, and Recovery Wadding.
The Saturn V rocket was the booster rocket used to launch all Apollo moon missions. It was the most powerful rocket ever built, standing over 360 feet tall and weighing over 6 million pounds.
It could be, if the right rocket vehicles were built, but would the risk of it falling back to Earth in the event of a launch failure be acceptable?
The first multi-stage liquid fuel rocket- intended to prove both concepts was launched and fired by Mr. Goddard in I believe l926. Many more were to follow.
The mammoth Saturn V 3-stage liquid fueled Lunar Launch Vehicle was responsible for the successful launch of all of the Apollo spacecraft (except of course Apollo 1, destroyed by fire on the launch pad during testing). The Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral, Florida, was specifically designed and built to assemble and service the Saturn V. When being rolled out on the crawler to the launch pad, the tip of the nose cone cleared the top of the doorway by only 6'. With the Apollo spacecraft aboard, the Saturn V was 363' tall and 33' wide, and weighed 6,699,000 lbs. It was just 1 foot shorter than St. Paul's Cathedral in London.