poke-gravity
No, the flag on the moon did not fall when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin blasted off because there is no atmosphere on the moon to cause the flag to float or fall. However, the motion from the rocket blast-off did cause the flag to ripple.
Yes, typically rockets have stages that separate and fall off as the rocket ascends into space. This process, known as staging, allows the rocket to shed excess weight and continue on its trajectory with optimal efficiency.
Leprosy does not make skin parts to fall off but leads to loss of sensation in such areas.
yes
honk if parts fall off
Apollo 11 blasted off on July 16, 1969.
The booster rockets fall off first, followed by the external fuel tank.
It is important to have proper fitting parts on a car. A serpentine belt will fall off because it is worn out, or because it is too big for the car.
Rockets take off due to the principle of Newton's third law of motion, which states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. By expelling high-speed exhaust gases downwards, the rocket generates an upward force to lift off the ground and overcome Earth's gravitational pull.
Rockets have potential energy because they store chemical energy in their fuel, which is converted into kinetic energy as the rocket propels forward. As the fuel is burned and expelled out of the rocket, it pushes against the ground or atmosphere, causing the rocket to move and lift off the ground.
The single-stage rocket can get the payload off earth, but not into space, because there is not enough fuel, and the weight eventually becomes too great. So at some point, the rocket will fall back down to earth. For this reason, most single-stage rockets are missiles.
The rock was broke into pieces using explosives