NASA owns a pair of modified Boeing 747s for ferrying space shuttle orbiters between Vandenburg Air Force Base in California and the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
The space shuttle piggybacked on a modified Boeing 747 aircraft known as the Shuttle Carrier Aircraft (SCA). This allowed for transportation of the space shuttle to and from different launch sites across the United States.
A space shuttle is a reusable spacecraft with wings and a tail for controlled re-entry into Earth's atmosphere, while a spaceplane is a vehicle that takes off and lands like an airplane and has the ability to reach space but may not have the same capabilities for re-entering Earth's atmosphere. Essentially, a spaceplane is a type of spacecraft, whereas a space shuttle is a specific kind of spacecraft with distinct features.
The space shuttle used a mixture of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen as fuel for its main engines. These propellants are combustion products of a chemical reaction that produces high thrust for the shuttle's liftoff and orbital maneuvers.
So they can find where they are going, like the ISS
NASA's (National Aeronautics and Space Administration's) Space Shuttle Program (SSP) has been retired following the end of the last space shuttle mission, STS-135 (Space Transportation System 135), which landed in the pre-dawn darkness hours of Thursday, July 21, 2011 (coincidentally, the day after the 42nd anniversary of the first Moon landing) at the Shuttle Landing Facility (SLF) (runway) at the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Florida. All ten NASA centers played some kind of a role and provided support for every space shuttle mission and for the operations of the Space Shuttle Program as a whole, however the Space Shuttle Program office was located at the Lyndon Baines Johnson Space Center (JSC) at Houston, TX.
Space shuttles use a combination of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen as fuel for their main engines. These two chemicals combine in a controlled combustion process to produce the thrust needed for the shuttle to launch and navigate through space.
A space shuttle is a reusable spacecraft with wings and a tail for controlled re-entry into Earth's atmosphere, while a spaceplane is a vehicle that takes off and lands like an airplane and has the ability to reach space but may not have the same capabilities for re-entering Earth's atmosphere. Essentially, a spaceplane is a type of spacecraft, whereas a space shuttle is a specific kind of spacecraft with distinct features.
I dont know what your talking about
Apollo 13 did not use a Space Shuttle. Apollo 13 was in April, 1970. The Space Shuttle was not invented until the '80s. Apollo 13 was launched by Saturn V.
the space shuttle challenger was kind of safe. the only problem was that it was a cold day and the O-rings broke because of the cold.
Liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen.
The space shuttle used a mixture of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen as fuel for its main engines. These propellants are combustion products of a chemical reaction that produces high thrust for the shuttle's liftoff and orbital maneuvers.
I am not actually sure but I think it is some kind of space shuttle that went to Mars?
Background of culture means ceremonial parties in a space shuttle. They have a party with their kind of culture.
fundamentally all things that fly into space are spacecrafts. There are two tipes of manned spacecrafts: spaceplanes and capsules . Apollo, Gemini, Mercury were capsules, also soyuz. Space Shuttle orbiter and Sovietic Buran Shuttle are a kind of spaceplanes. can be defined space shuttle also anything that can easily carry cargo or astronauts to space: the Space Shuttle stack is able to carry about 25 metric tons, that make it a unique blend of cargo and human transport skills, essential to the Space Station to be built
liquid because ir never runs out <3
So they can find where they are going, like the ISS
NASA's (National Aeronautics and Space Administration's) Space Shuttle Program (SSP) has been retired following the end of the last space shuttle mission, STS-135 (Space Transportation System 135), which landed in the pre-dawn darkness hours of Thursday, July 21, 2011 (coincidentally, the day after the 42nd anniversary of the first Moon landing) at the Shuttle Landing Facility (SLF) (runway) at the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Florida. All ten NASA centers played some kind of a role and provided support for every space shuttle mission and for the operations of the Space Shuttle Program as a whole, however the Space Shuttle Program office was located at the Lyndon Baines Johnson Space Center (JSC) at Houston, TX.