No, they can't even take a bath properly
2006-06-13 06:56:35
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answer #1
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answered by ag_iitkgp 7
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Hello. All of you smartniks think you know sooooooo much! Well, for your information, there is a gravity chamber in the space station with a complete waterpark, including corn dogs, funnel cakes and wack-a-mole. Considering it has a corn dog vendor we can safely assume it was financed by the good ol' U.S. of A.
2006-06-13 08:34:53
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answer #2
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answered by Ralphie da Monkey 3
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Sending the team available is the costly area. particularly costly. you're able to desire to circulate all a thank you to the Moon (strengthen up the stuff and the human beings to 11 km/s), then land on the Moon (braking against one million/6 gravity isn't unfastened), take off from the Moon returned (lots of the human beings might insist on being delivered back alive) which takes greater gas, then arrive back at Earth at 25,000 mph (11 km/s) and... wish for the proper. in assessment, the return and forth basically desires to be victorious in particularly below 8 km/s to realize orbit. Drop off the fabric (which, being in the shipment carry of the return and forth, is already in the appropriate orbit) and the human beings. people who insist on coming back, hop back into the return and forth which purely desires to brake slightly, inflicting it to drop into the ambience at a safer velocity of 17,000 mph. additionally, on the Moon, you don't get any of a few super advantages of being in orbit (e.g., microgravity experiments). on the gap spation, the "lifeboat" is a trouble-free Soyouz pill. You hop in, separate, brake slightly... and you fall back to Earth. From the Moon, you may wish a far greater difficult area vehicle as a "lifeboat". of path, in case you have the money to construct a Moon base, circulate suitable forward.
2016-12-08 20:14:05
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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There is no gravity in space, there for you wouldn't be able to slide down. You would be weightless and a slide would be useless.
2006-06-13 07:08:11
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Seeing as how one cannot "slide" in space, the answer is probably no.
2006-06-13 07:15:25
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answer #5
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answered by The Oldest Soul 3
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no
can water move as it does on earth in space?
Of course not it turns into globs....besides those get into vital components....hiisssss, crackle,,,, ummm NASA we have a problem
2006-06-20 02:10:17
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answer #6
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answered by WDubsW 5
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you an idiot! get a job old man!
2006-06-13 06:53:50
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answer #7
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answered by dnm 1
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