The space shuttle would get ripped apart and would be destroyed because of the strong gravity difference (the nose would get pulled on by gravity harder than on the tail).
Here's the deal about black holes: nothing that goes in can ever get out. So, if a space shuttle was sucked into a black hole, it would not be able to get out. The rarely happens because the people have screens and tools that help them find where the black holes are. Not even light can go through a black hole. Something no one knows is where black holes lead to.
Astronauts aboard the Space Shuttle may well take photos of Mars as personal souvenirsif they have time, but the photos would have very little scientific value.The Space Shuttle operates at about 0.0005 percent of the smallest possible distance between Earthand Mars. The Shuttle astronauts don't get appreciably closer to Mars than you do in your kitchen.If additional imaging of Mars is required, it might be acquired by the Hubble Space Telescope, or bythe two rovers currently operating on the surface of Mars.
There have been no space shuttle landings on Neptune. It would be impossible to land on Neptune for two reasons: 1 - Neptune is a gas giant 2 - Neptune is freezing cold, electronic equipment would freeze and malfunction
The shuttle that would put the Hubble into orbit finally launched on April 24, 1990.
No. A meteorite is an object that has already come through the Earth's atmosphere from space. On the way down, they are called meteors. A space shuttle, whether above or below the atmosphere, would need to avoid meteors at all costs. Since meteors are just rocks on the way from space to Earth, a shuttle therefore could not travel to them. Two kinds of space objects that spacecraft "could" travel to are comets and asteroids. But the space shuttle is not the proper kind of vehicle for such explorations.
you would float around till you get in a black hole or a planets grational pull
It would stop burning if there was no oxygen.
If for some reason right then and there a star imploded and made a black hole and the space shuttle met it's unlikely demise.
Here's the deal about black holes: nothing that goes in can ever get out. So, if a space shuttle was sucked into a black hole, it would not be able to get out. The rarely happens because the people have screens and tools that help them find where the black holes are. Not even light can go through a black hole. Something no one knows is where black holes lead to.
Well, the space shuttle is no longer in space, it is in a museum, so if you hit a hockey puck off it, the hockey puck would probably crash into the museum wall.
Any! but i would seggest a space shuttle Any! but i would seggest a space shuttle
If you happened to be moving away from the shuttle at the time, you would continue in that direction until something changed your direction of movement.
I am pretty sure that a space shuttle is found in the thermosphere or mesosphere.
they would travel in a space shuttle
yes. How else would the space shuttle stay in orbit?
No. The spac shuttle does not go beyond low Earth orbit. To see a black hole would require interstellar travel, which is not possible with current technology and might never be possible.
In space, they don't. If they are in a space shuttle, however, they would move themselves using handlebars attached to the shuttle designed specifically for propelling themselves.