Yes, the first space zone, often referred to as the Kármán line, is directly above the vehicle. It is commonly defined as the boundary of space, located at an altitude of 100 kilometers (62 miles) above sea level. This zone marks the transition from Earth's atmosphere to outer space, indicating that anything above this line is considered to be in space.
115 to 400 miles above the Earth.
No, only when they leave the space shuttle or whichever vehicle they have traveled in.
Space Above and Beyond - 1995 Toy Soldiers 1-16 was released on: USA: 18 February 1996
Actually the first US astronaut in space (Alan Shepard) did NOT orbit--he only had a 15-minute sub-orbital flight. The first US astronaut to orbit Earth was John Glenn. In any event, neither of them could have gone to the moon because at that time we simply did not have the technology to send them there.
She was the first woman in space, in 1963.
The first space shuttle was first launched in 1981.
SpaceShipOne
Alexei Leonov, a Russian cosmonaut, made the first space walk on March 18 1965
Yes !
John Glenn
united states
united states
The United States developed the first reusable space vehicle, the Space Shuttle, in the 1980s. It was a revolutionary spacecraft that could carry astronauts and cargo into space and return to Earth to be used again for future missions.
A satellite.
Nothing (well the atmosphere and then outer space)! As the epicentre of an earthquake is the point on Earth's surface directly above the focus or hypocentre (which is the place in the Earth where the rupture / fault movement that causes the earthquake occurs).
NASA They are the only ones to launch space shuttles seeing as how the space shuttle is NASA's vehicle
Backing up--it is your fault.