Rocket fuel is typically stored in fuel tanks within the rocket's structure. The tanks are often made of lightweight materials such as aluminum or composite materials to minimize weight. The fuel may be stored separately from the oxidizer in different tanks, or they may be stored together as a single fuel mixture.
Diesel is a fuel that is used in cars and stored in tanks. Gasoline / Petrol is another fuel that is used in cars and stored in tanks.
in the wings
The fuel is usually stored in tanks which are strapped to the sides of the basket.
Fuel is generally stored in tanks built into the wings.
It is stored in two separate tanks. In the shuttle, the external tank(s) hold the two fuels as well as smaller tanks inside the shuttles wings.
In most modern aircraft they are in the wings.
Fuel is typically stored in rockets either as liquid fuel in fuel tanks or as solid fuel in a casing. Liquid fuel rockets have separate tanks for liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen or kerosene, while solid fuel rockets have a solid propellant mixture in a casing. Both types of fuel storage systems are designed to be safe, efficient, and controlled during flight.
In water filled tanks on the power station site
liquid
The fuel tanks in almost all aircraft are in the wings. They have always been built that way. The designers feel, from several different angles, that it's the best place to have the fuel tanks - simple as that.
Gasoline is stored in tanks underground. The outside temperature has no effect on the temperature of the fuel stored underground.