The smallest space shuttle is the Space Shuttle Enterprise. It was a test vehicle and did not fly any space missions. It was used for atmospheric approach and landing tests.
Astronauts have landed on the Moon, which is not a planet but a natural satellite of Earth. Humans have not yet landed on any other planets in our solar system.
NASA does not use spac shuttle any more
No, Orrin Hatch did not ride in the space shuttle. He is a former U.S. Senator from Utah who did not participate in any space missions.
Nope. Yuma doesn't have suitable facilities that could have supported the Space Shuttle, and there was no point to building any when they already had backup sites at Vandenberg to the west in California, and White Sands to the east in New Mexico. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_space_shuttle_landing_sites
No, the last space shuttle launched by the U.S., the shuttle Atlantis (STS-135), landed on July 21st, 2011. The only manned vehicles currently launching into space are Russian Soyuz vehicles servicing the ISS (International Space Station).
All ofChallenger's debris landed into the ocean just off the Kennedy Space Center. No one on the surface was struck.
Any! but i would seggest a space shuttle Any! but i would seggest a space shuttle
they did sleep on it with a sleeping bag. the space shuttle landed on the moon that was fasimnating u know. any who a man called robby ray sang a song called still lovin ya. niel armstraong was the first man on the moon.
no. at least not a shuttle by itself. There may have been a stopover of a shuttle on top of the 747 shuttle carrier at some point, but I don't have any way of checking that. Shuttles have landed at Kennedy Space Center, Edwards Air Force Base (California), and White Sands, New Mexico.
Apollo 13 was not a Space Shuttle in any sence, as it was not a reusable space craft.
The smallest space shuttle is the Space Shuttle Enterprise. It was a test vehicle and did not fly any space missions. It was used for atmospheric approach and landing tests.
No. The atmosphere just gets thicker and thicker until it crushes any space craft that we might send into it. There is no well defined solid surface like we have on earth and other rocky planets.
Unfortunately, the Space Shuttle Program Has Been Retired, and All Remaining Shuttles Converted Into Museum Exhibits. There Are No Longer Any Space Shuttle Launches.
Astronauts have landed on the Moon, which is not a planet but a natural satellite of Earth. Humans have not yet landed on any other planets in our solar system.
The Voyager probes were deep space probes, sent to scout out the outer planets and deep space, so they never really "landed" on any of the planets although voyager I was sent first voyager II overtook it and encountered Saturn on august 1981.
the space shuttle is propeled by liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen oxidiser.