| Date Answered | Questioner (age, location) | Question | Answer |
|---|---|---|---|
| October 9, 2008 | Katissa (age 19, NC) | Describe the mission that we have taken to other planets. | There are many missions to other planets. It would be too long to describe all of them here. NASA web page offers related information. |
| September 18, 2008 | chris (age 13, canada) | my question is why dont u guys send a robot to other galaxys such as ellipticuls,irregulars or spirals. because there might be other life or other planets that human has not discovered yet think about it and keep it in and on your mind!? | Recent measurements indicate that the closest galaxy is Canis Major dwarf, at only 42 000 light years from the Galactic center. This means that if we can send a space mission traveling at the speed of light (1 079 252 848 km/h or 670,616,629.4 miles per hour), it would take 42 thousand years to reach Canis Major. |
| August 21, 2008 | Leslie (age 12, Ontario, Canada) | I have to do a project on a robot that has to be sent to one of the planets in our solar system and we have to make up some features that our robot will have and based on one of the robots that was sent to Mars in 1997 what would some of the features be? Also we have to have a day and night pattern for our robot what would that be? To an experts opinion what planet would be best for my robot and why? Please let me know VERY soon! Yours Truly: Leslie. |
Please, visit this page for information about the robots sent to Mars. |
| August 19, 2008 | Manish Kumar Singh (age 19, India) | What happened to the huygens probe sent to explore Titan ?(i read that it functioned for 1.5 hrs but what exactly had happened and why did it stop functioning is what i want to know) | The main reason was the life of the battery, wich went way beyond its life expectancy. It should be noted that the mission intended to obtain measurements during both the descending phase and after landing. Everything was accomplished! |
| July 7, 2008 | Rebecca (age , ) | On July 1, 2004 UTC, the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft fired its main engine to reduce its speed, allowing the spacecraft to be captured by Saturn's gravity and enter orbit. The spacecraft is now on a four-year mission to explore the ringed planet, its mysterious moons, the stunning rings and its complex magnetic environment. More information at the web page of the Cassini-Huygens mission. | |
| June 26, 2008 | Matthew (age !0, New York) | Dose Mars Stil Have The Rovers On It??????????? | The twin rovers landed on Mars in January 2004, on missions originally planned to last 90 days. However, NASA is extending, for a fifth time, the activities of the Mars Exploration Rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, possibly through 2009. More information at NASA. |
| June 20, 2008 | Haley (age 11, Ga-Usa) | I am doing a research on Mercury and I wonder how could The Space Missions go near Mercury without blowing up from the heat from the sun? | Please, visite our page Missions to Mercury for details about these missions. |
| June 20, 2008 | Haley Matthews (age 11, Ga-Usa) | I am doing a research on Mercury and I wonder how could The Space Missions go near Mercury without blowing up from the heat from the sun? | Please, visite our page Missions to Mercury for details about these missions. |
| May 29, 2008 | anthony (age 24, ma) | did you realy send a monkey into outer space? | Before sending humans to the space, several animals were sent to study how space flights would affect them. The first animal to be flown in to space was the Russian dog Laika, in 1957. |
| April 24, 2008 | Mark (age 14, USA) | How does the Apollo 11 mission affect us today? | Apollo 11 mission planned to collect lunar samples, deploy several experiments, and examine and photograph the lunar surface. All scientific activities were completed satisfactorily. Besides the scientific success of the mission, the Apollo 11 mission was the first human spaceflight mission to land on the Moon, and has had a wide effect on popular culture. |
| April 22, 2008 | priya (age 24, kerala) | Which are the indian satellites now in orbit? | There have been 28 Indian satellites missions, from the Aryabhata satellite, launched in 1975, to the Indian Remote Sensing Satellite (IRS-1D) launched in 1997. Still in service are the Stretched Rohini Satellite Series (SROSS-C2), the Indian National Satellites INSAT-1D, INSAT-2A, INSAT-2B, and INSAT-2C, the Indian Remote Sensing Satellites IRS-1B, IRS-1C, IRS-P3, and IRS-1D. More information here. |
| April 22, 2008 | priya (age 24, kerala) | Which are the indian satellites now in orbit? | There have been 28 Indian satellites missions, from the Aryabhata satellite, launched in 1975, to the Indian Remote Sensing Satellite (IRS-1D) launched in 1997. Still in service are the Stretched Rohini Satellite Series (SROSS-C2), the Indian National Satellites INSAT-1D, INSAT-2A, INSAT-2B, and INSAT-2C, the Indian Remote Sensing Satellites IRS-1B, IRS-1C, IRS-P3, and IRS-1D. More information here. |
| April 22, 2008 | priya (age 24, kerala) | Which are the indian satellites now in orbit? | There have been 28 Indian satellites, from the Aryabhata satellite, launched in 1975, to the Indian Remote Sensing Satellite (IRS-1D) launched in 1997. More information here. |
| April 22, 2008 | priya (age 24, kerala) | Which are the indian satellites now in orbit? | There have been 28 Indian satellites, from Aryabhata, launched in 1975, to Indian Remote Sensing Satellite (IRS-1D) laaunched in 1997. More information here. |
| April 22, 2008 | priya (age 24, kerala) | Which are the indian satellites now in orbit? | There have been 17 Indian satellites, from Aryabhata, launched in 1975, to Indian Remote Sensing Satellite (IRS-1D) laaunched in 1997. More information here. |
| April 18, 2008 | Josh (age 9, Illinois) | How much would it cost to travel to Jupiter? | Spacecraft designe, production and operation are very expensive. For example, the estimated cost of manned space missions to Mars is $180 billion. |
| April 17, 2008 | sunitha (age , ) | The Bhaskara-I Satellite was the first Indian low orbit Earth Observation Satellite. It was launched on June 7, 1979 by a Soviet Intercosmos rocket. Its orbit parameters are 619 x 562 km inclined at 50.7 deg. On-board systems include television ameras operating in visible and near-infrared (to collect data related to hydrology, forestry and geology), and a microwave radiometer for study of ocean-state, water vapor, liquid water content in the atmosphere, etc. | |
| April 17, 2008 | R.sunitha (age , ) | The Bhaskara-I Satellite was the first Indian low orbit Earth Observation Satellite. It was launched on June 7, 1979 by a Soviet Intercosmos rocket. Its orbit parameters are 619 x 562 km inclined at 50.7 deg. On-board systems include television ameras operating in visible and near-infrared (to collect data related to hydrology, forestry and geology), and a microwave radiometer for study of ocean-state, water vapor, liquid water content in the atmosphere, etc. | |
| March 31, 2008 | samntha (age 12, nc) | number of missions earth has had | This NASA-Earth Missions web page lists all past, current, and future mission to study our planet. |
| March 31, 2008 | samntha smih (age 12, kings mountain nc) | number of missions earth has had | This NASA-Earth Missions web page lists all past, current, and future mission to study our planet. |
| February 15, 2008 | Ben (age 11, Illinois) | What was Sputnick's obital speed ? | Sputnik-I traveled at 29 000 kilometers (18,000 mi) per hour. |
| February 11, 2008 | Jenny (age 11, California) | How is the Hubble space telescope able to operate outside the atmosphere? | At an altitude of 569 km, or 353 miles, inclined 28.5 degrees to the equator (low-Earth orbit), Hubble is outside the earth atmosphere. |
| January 31, 2008 | indy (age 14, Australia) | Have any space crafts left our solar system? | The more likely man-made object to reach the edge of our system is NASA's Voyager 1. 30 years after its launch it is expected to have crossed the end of the heliosphere, the region of the universe where the Sun'a magnetic field is predominant. |
| January 2, 2008 | Andrew | Yes, Voyager 2 was a flyby mission that visited Uranus in early 1986. Around 7000 images of Uranus, its rings, and its satellites were received from this mission. | |
| January 2, 2008 | Andrew | Yes, Voyager 2 was a flyby mission that visited Uranus in early 1986. Around 7000 images of Uranus, its rings, and its satellites were received fron this mission. | |
| December 19, 2007 | pearce (age 10yrs, jaamaica) | Why is space travel dangerous? | Space travel, the so called new frontier, is still on its beginning. There are still many incognits we don't now, and the astronauts will have to deal with them. There are also technical factors to consider. Just imagine, if after more than a century after the first one was created, our cars are still far from perfect and need several trips to the workshop, how many things will need to be perfectioned to make space ships absolutely safe! |
| July 20, 2007 | Sam (age 13, Northern Ireland) | Could we ever live on the moon and if so what would we need to do to do so? | A space station on the Moon (shouldn't it be call a "Lunar Station"?) has been a topic of discussion for some time. Such a station should create the right conditions for human inhabitants. |
| July 20, 2007 | siddharth (age 13, uttar pradesh/india) | If astronauts have really traveled to moon so how can they come back as all the engines and the fuel is used up to escape the Earth’s gravitation? | Actually, they Space Shuttle engines are not used for lift up. The power at this time is provided by external fuel rockets that propel the shuttles to their escape velocity. The on-board engines are use for maneuvers in space, including the orientation, acceleration (and braking!) when returning to Earth. |
| July 19, 2007 | L . Ashok (age 16, Malaysia) | what is aerogel | Aerogel is pure silicon dioxide and sand, just as is glass, but aerogel is a thousand times less dense because it is 99.8 percent air. It has been recognized as the solid with the lowest density. As a side note, aerogel is the particle-collecting substance on NASA's Stardust spacecraft. |
| July 11, 2007 | Brittney (age 12, california) | Why is sojourner not transmiting any data anymore | The rover Sojourner, as other rovers and most of the spaceships, relies on solar panels and batteries to operate, and both degenerate with time. In the specific case of Sojourner, the 3 strings of rover batteries were not rechargeable, and became depleted limiting it to solar power only. |
| July 9, 2007 | karren (age 11, California) | how did mariner 10 get it's name? | Mariner 10 was the seventh successful launch in the Mariner series, the first spacecraft to use the gravitational pull of one planet (Venus) to reach another (Mercury), and the first spacecraft mission to visit two planets. More information in NASA webpage Mariner 10. |
| May 21, 2007 | KASANDRA (age 11, TEXAS USA) | HAS ANYONE EVER DIED ON A MISSION IF SO WHY | Unfortunately, yes. For example, the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster occurred on February 1, 2003, when Columbia disintegrated over Texas during re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere, shortly before concluding its 28th mission. |
| May 11, 2007 | Erick (age 13, Florida/USA) | what satellite above the sun is gathering sun data | The Solar and Heliospheric Observator (SOHO). Vist NASA/SOHO website. |
| April 13, 2007 | Ashley (age 15, Delaware) | Which space probe will head into the kuiper belt after it flies past pluto? | NASA's Pluto-Kuiper Belt Mission is known as New Horizons. In the web page NASA-New Horizons you will be able to find all about this mission. |
| April 13, 2007 | Franchesco | The best way to minimize the effects of the radiation is to avoid the radiation belts, which is routinely done for all manned missions. When the Sun, an important source of radiation, is very active, NASA closely follows the real time information gathered by the NOAA-Space Environment Center before authorizing a space walk. | |
| April 7, 2007 | briana (age 9, washinton) | 4 famus space shuttles | The NASA’s Space Shuttle fleet includes: Columbia (28 flights) and Challenger (10 flights). These Space Shuttles are not longer in service, they were destroyed in accidents. Discovery (33 flights), Atlantis (27 flights) and Endeavour (19 flights). |
| March 28, 2007 | samantha (age 10, ohio) | who is going to be on the space craft AIM? | The Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere (AIM) mission, to be launched on April 25, 2007, is focused on the study of Polar Mesospheric Clouds (PMC’s), also known as noctilucent clouds (NLC’s). This mission is not tripulated. For more information visit our web page AIM Mission Overview. |
| March 21, 2007 | Bianca (age 11, california) | what probes have been sent to pluto or will be sent to pluto. | New Horizons is a NASA's Pluto - Kuiper Belt mission that was launched on 19 January 2006, 19:00:00 UTC. Pluto closest approach will happen on 14 July 2015, 11:59:00 UTC. |
| March 1, 2007 | christopher (age 22, philippines) | the rosetta mission. | The Rosetta Mission general goals are to study the origin of comets, the relationship between cometary and interstellar material and its implications with regard to the origin of the Solar System. Rosetta trajectory is very complex, including 4 "sling shots" manouvers (three Earth and one Mars gravity assist manoeuvre). Abundant information about this mission can be found at the web site Rosetta. |
| January 21, 2007 | Lindsey (age 13, Florida) | Identify several jobs that computers perform in space exploration. | The list would be too long. Almost every aspect of the space exploration is related to computers. From the calculation of the ideal trajectory during launch, to the analysis of satellite data. |
| December 27, 2006 | maria (age 12, california) | how far is the I.S.S. from planet earth? | The altitude of the ISS is now 354.4 km. For real time values visit NASA ISS Tracker. |
| December 20, 2006 | Ermias (age 24, Ethiopia) | Waht was the size of Sputnik lunche on oct 4, 1957 and what it lookes like? Thank you. |
The Soviet Union successfully launched Sputnik I on October 4, 1957. The first artificial satellite was about the size of a basketball, weighed only 183 pounds, and took about 98 minutes to orbit the Earth. More information can be found at Sputnik. |
| November 14, 2006 | Jordyn (age 12, Utah) | Who wrote the book From Earth To The Moon,published in 1865? | From the Earth to the Moon, by Jules Verne, is considered to be the single most important work of fiction in the history of astronautics. Originally published in 1865, it has been a tale loved by generations. |
| March 29, 1999 & July 23, 2001 | 7th and 8th Grade Russian Students (ages 11-14, Connecticut, USA) | Our classes will be seeing the film October Sky and have been studying Sputnik in preparation. The only student-generated question that we have not been able to find an answer to is the cost of this satellite. Do you know how much it cost to develop in either rubles or dollars? | I wasn't able to find the cost of Sputnik anywhere! The only reason for that we could think of here was that maybe Russia never released the cost of the satellite. But if anyone knows, please let us know! Cami, a Windows to the Universe user, wrote in to tell us that Sputnik cost billions of rubles. Thanks Cami! |
| November 30, 2000 | Leslie (age 20, Kansas, USA) | What do you know about the Voyager missions? | The Voyager probes are really, really far out in space! They are likely to clear the heliosphere by 2008. Then they'll be where no spacecraft has ever gone before. |
| November 30, 2000 | Tomeka (age 14, Colorado, USA) | What is the I.S.S.? | The ISS is the International Space Station. |
| June 19, 2000 | Boonie (age 26, Australia ) | Is there going to be a new satellite launched this year? If so, what is the name of it? | There are new satellites launched all the time. To see a NASA launch schedule, click here. |
| May 10, 2000 | Lori (age 42, Florida, USA) | What was the name of the first geosynchronous satellite? | The first geosynchronous satellite was named Syncom. It was launched in 1963 by Hughes Aircraft and NASA. A geosynchronous satellite stays in the same orbit around the Earth and travels at the same speed as the rotation of the Earth. |
| March 1, 2000 | Judith (age 51, Australia) | What are the main reasons for and against space exploration? | Well, the biggest reason to explore space is to learn. The origin of our world, the possibility of life on other worlds, and the chance that we could one day live on another planet are all great reasons to venture off Earth.
Of course, there are some setbacks. Finance is probably the biggest problem with exploration. The recent losses of the Mars Climate Orbiter and the Polar Lander are examples of money lost during exploration. The loss of life isn't as much of a problem now as it will be in the future. If we decide to send astronauts to Mars, or try to make a colony on the Moon, there is always a chance a problem could occur. The pros and cons to space exploration are vast and therefore difficult to explain in a few paragraphs. It does make a great conversation piece, though! |
| January 25, 2000 | Dale (age 12, Canada) | Do you think Nasa will send another explorer to Mars? | The recent disasters with the Mars Polar Lander and the Mars Climate Orbiter have not stopped NASA from studying Mars. In fact, more missions are already being planned. Read more about the future missions to Mars here. |
| July 26, 1999 | Michael (age 36, Austria) | All of the pictures taken on the Moon by Apollo astronauts do not show any stars in the background. Can you explain why please? | The reason no stars are visible in the Apollo Moon landing photos is because the mission was faked on a Hollywood sound-stage ... just kidding! The easiest way to explain this is that it was just too bright, at least for the camera. When a camera is set to photograph a bright object like the Moon or astronauts on the Moon it has to use a short exposure and slow f/stop. This is the opposite setting than the one needed to capture stars. Stars will appear the same from the Moon as from the Earth (except that they won't twinkle because the Moon doesn't have much of an atmosphere). |
| July 19, 1999 | Anna (age 14, New York) | What kind of metals are used in space crafts? Are there strong metals on the outside that can be used as protection from debris in space? Are there different metals used inside space stations for the plumbing? | Spacecraft are made out of metals that are really strong and can withstand the really high temperatures and really cold temperatures of outer space. Aluminum is one that is used in many spacecraft because it has these features and it is extremely light in weight. The lighter the metal, the easier it is to launch the spacecraft into space. In order to protect spacecraft from space debris, astronauts simply try to steer their spacecraft away from incoming objects. Because the smallest piece of rock or space junk can be traveling at very high speeds in space, it can make a hole in almost any material. The best way for a spacecraft to protect itself is to avoid and stay away from space objects. As for the pipes, engineers had to design pipes that would be light and really strong. On the space station, pipes are made out of metal, and plastic depending on what flows inside. |
| June 22, 1999 | Matthew (age 26, Washington) | Will there be any more missions to explore the planets closest to the sun (Mercury & Venus)? | NASA has a number of current and future proposed missions to a large number of places. MESSENGER and VESPER are two possible missions to Mercury and Venus. I am currently working on a proposal for a landed mission to Mercury for submission to NASA's JPL at the end of the summer. |
| June 7, 1999 | Nichole (age 14, Idaho) | Will the Y2K computer bug have any effect on the NASA's Cassini mission to Saturn? | NASA is very carefully checking all their computers, hardware and software, to be absolutely sure nothing will go wrong as the new year begins. |
| May 6, 1999 | Andreas and Troels (age 17, Denmark) | We heard that a plane will be sent to mars to discover the valles merineris. Can you write something about it, by the way the name of the plane is Kitty Hawk if it helps you and it will happen in the year 2003. | The plan is that on December 17, 2003, the Kitty Hawk would make a 1,800 kilometer flight over the Valles Marineris. It will carry a number of instruments for experiments. The Kitty Hawk is currently in the proposal stage. |
| May 1, 1999 | Ashley (age 14, New South Wales, Australia) | Why do satellites burn up upon entering the atmosphere? Are there any pictures of this? | Satellites burn up upon re-entry because the Earth's atmosphere causes friction against the satellite, which in turn becomes heat. This causes the satellite to burst into flame. Her e is a great website about re-entry, with pictures. |
| April 16, 1999 | Conny (age 36, Canada) | I am looking for the Mir Space Station at night.Where abouts should I be looking?I live in Northern British Columbia.Can it be seen close to a planet? How fast does it move across the night sky? And does it go east to west or west to east? | All of that depends upon where you live. Here is NASA's Mir visibility page, which answers all your questions based on the city you live closest to. |
| April 15, 1999 | Adam (age 9, Iowa, USA) | How long would it take to travel from Earth to Jupiter? | It depends on how fast you go. The Voyagers took about three years, the fastest so far. |
| February 4, 1999 | Justin (age 10, Ohio, USA) | When I was 9 I signed a thing that said my name would be sent to Mars. Is that true? | Probably! 932,816 names were sent to Mars on January 3, 1999. |
| January 6, 1999 | Johnathan (age 13) | With the upcoming year 2000 is there a space mission planned to explore the outer regions of our solar system? | NASA is working on a mission called the 'Pluto-Kuiper Express' which will do exactly that. It is hoped that the Express will get to Pluto and Charon around 2010, and if that is successful, c ontinue on to the Kuiper Disk. |
| November 30, 1998 | Daryl (age 30) | I was reading that sometime this year or next we are going to start building a space station. Is this true? How long will it take? How big will it be? | Yes! An International Space Station is in the works, and you can read all about it here. |
| November 19, 1998 | Griff (age 11, Wisconsin, USA) | How far is the farthest any of our space sattilites have gone? | Pioneer 10 and 11 and Voyager 1 and 2 have left the solarsystem. Voyager 1 and 2 are still transmitting data. |
| November 10, 1998 | Jim (age 43, Ohio, USA) | If Vega is 24 Light Years from Earth, how long would it take any of our conventional spacecraft to reach Vega? How about to the center of our Galaxy (30,000 Light Years) and the closest Spiral Galaxy (2 Million Light Years)? | The Galileo probe reached a speed of about 106,000 mi/hr, the fastest so far. It is probable that using the slingshot effect of Jupiter, we could reach speeds of 150,000 mi/hr. Even at this speed, it would take about 102,000 years to reach Vega, 129 ,000 years to the center of the Galaxy, and 8,500,000,000 years to get to the next galaxy! |
| November 9, 1998 | Ben (age 14, Ontario, Canada) | What material is a spaceship constructed of? | Spaceships are usually made of very light weight and durable alloys of titanium, aluminum and magnesium. |
| November 4, 1998 | Cristen (age 10) | What was the first spacecraft to visit space? | Soviet satellite Sputnik 1, launched in 1957, was the first artificial satellite to orbit the Earth. |
| October 7, 1998 | Josh (Age 9, Pennsylvania, USA) | What is NASA doing next in space? | NASA currently has a lot of things planned. On October 25, the Deep Space 1 mission will be launched to demonstrate the first ion propulsion engine to operate in deep space. In December and January, the Mars Climate Orbiter and the Mars Polar Lander will be launched. To better study the ocean winds and El Nino, the Quikscat sattelite will be launched November 24. NASA is also testing other technologies, such as in aeronautics research and propulsion technology. |
| September 14, 1998 | Austin (Age 8, Illinois, USA) | What does NASA mean? | NASA stands for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Here's a link to their homepage. |
| August 7, 1998 | Amy (Age 22, Vermont, USA) | I would just like to know why it's necessary to conduct 'experiments' in outer space since technology exists, upon the earth, to emulate and mimic the conditions of space here on the earth. Are not all the experiments based on a '0-gravity' measuremen t and the answers already a scientific fact and readily available and known? | Actually, it is quite impossible to create 'zero-gravity' here on Earth. I think one of the most frequent questions I get from people is whether or not I've been in the microgravity room at NASA...did I get to float around and all? There really is n
o such room! One of the only ways to simulate microgravity in the Earth environment is while in an airplane in the air. And this is only for 20 second periods of time. We actually don't have all of the answers readily available when it comes to a microgravity environment. Remember, humans have only been in space for the last 30 years of a very long existence. To get these answers, we really do need to do the research up in space. And there are some very imp ortant things being done...research in the area of diabetes, improved crystallography, fluids studies and medical research for those who are bed-ridden. Check out NASA's microgravity research homepage. It i s packed with more info! |
| August 5, 1998 | Jenny (Age 11, Australia) | How much money does the U.S. government fund NASA each year? | NASA's budget varies from year to year. Here's a whole page on NASA's current budget. |
| May 4, 1998 | Travis (age 15, Minnesota, U.S.A.) | Does the discovery of ice on the moon mean that one day in the near future man will be able to colonize it? | The discovery of ice doesn't mean we will be living on the moon very soon, but it makes it much more of a possibility, since water is essential to life. Since transporting things through space is very expensive, finding water on the moon means it wou ldn't have to be transported there, makeing living there a more reasonable possibility. |
| April 1, 1998 | Dennis (age 27, South Africa) | What is the probability of man ever sending a craft to our nearest star,and how long would it take. | The nearest star, Proxima Centauri, is 4.2 light years away. Right now it takes over six years for a probe to even get to Jupiter. A flight to Proxima at that rate would take something like 250,000 years! So, sending a spacecraft to a star is not i n the near future. |
| March 17, 1998 | Jan | How long does it take a probe to reach Jupiter? | The Galileo probe took about 6 years to reach Jupiter. |
| February 18, 1998 | Giulio (age 10, Milan) | What went wrong with the Challenger mission? | Because it was so cold on the day of the launch, the sealing joints on the rocket launching the Challenger failed.The leaking gas caught fire, which r uptured the hydrogen tank, which in turn ruptured the oxygen tank, causing a tremendous explosion. Which shows that little things can be extremely important! |
| February 17, 1998 | Minh (age 21, California, USA) | How can the satellites stay in their paths without bumping into each other? | Satellites stay in orbits that are very precise given that there are no external forces on the given satellite (like atmospheric drag which would eventually force a satellite into reentry...). And the actual distance between most large satellites is hundreds of miles so their is no danger of satellites bumping into each other (especially because we can track large objects in orbit around the Earth). |
| February 17, 1998 | Mike (age 39, New Jersey, USA) | I believe there are about 16,000 decayed man made objects in Earth's orbit. Orbital debris is becoming a problem. Why can't satellites and rocket stages have small jets attached to them, then after their mission is completed they could be nudged out o f orbit and would burn up in re-entry? | You're right, there is an incredible amount of debris in orbit around the Earth. TheESA debris site estimates that there is between 70,000-120,000 objects orbiting the Earth that are 1 c m or less in size! Even objects this small can cause considerable damage because they are traveling so fast! The large satellites that you mentioned like rocket stages are large enough to track from the Earth's surface, so they are not a huge problem (see question above!). It is the small flecks of paint that are too small to track from the Earth's surface that are the problem. And I'm sure you'd agree that it's just not feasible to put small jets on these tiny bits of orbital debris! |
| February 17, 1998 | Minh (age 21, California, USA) | What keeps the satellites moving?(What kind of power?) | A lot of the early satellites (1960's-late 1970's) used batteries of various forms as their main power source. The most common power source these days (for Earth-orbiting satellites) is photovoltaic cells. P hotovoltaic cells and the solar-generated electricity they produce are extremely reliable. Of course, back-up batteries (often rechargeable) are also included on a satellite so that energy is provided when the satellite is in darkness. |
| February 12, 1998 | Justin (age 9, Idaho, USA) Kristina (age 8, Idaho, USA) |
How far have Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 gone? Will Voyager 1 go into a different galaxy? | As of 1/23/98, Voyager 1 had travelled 12,142,000,000 kilometers (7,544,000,000 miles) since launch. Voyager 2 had travelled 11,448,000,000 kilometers (7,113,000,000 miles) since launch. The Voyager spacecraft a> are expected to reach the edge of our solar system by 2002, but they'll still be in the Milky Way galaxy for a long time! |
| February 6, 1998 | Giulio (age 10, Italy) | What was really the problem with Apollo 13? | Well, let's just say the movie, Apollo 13 wasn't too far off! Three days into the mission, Swigert, Haise, and Lovell heard a huge bang. The Apollo 13 crew heard an alarm go off and they radioed Mission Control: 'Hey, we've got a problem here!' The explosion caused a rupture in the liquid oxygen tank in the service module. The only part of the spacecraft t hat was still usable for returning back to Earth was the lunar module, the Aquarius. The Aquarius which was only meant to support two men for 50 hours (on the lunar surface!), supported the whole crew for 95 hours. The crew had to conserve power which m eant enduring temperatures just above freezing (which meant little, if any sleep!). The parts in the movie about measles, carbon dioxide and lost wedding bands were as well a part of their saga. Instead of landing on the moon, the Aquarius splashed down gently into the Pacific Ocean bringing the 3 men safely home. As NASA put it later: 'Apollo 13 must officially be classed as a failure, the first in 22 manned flights. But in another sense, as a brilliant demon stration of the human capability under almost unbearable stress, it has to be the most successful faliure in the annals of space flight." |
| January 15, 1998 | Sue (age 41, Louisiana, USA) | What was the name of the first satellite to receive radio, television and telephone calls in space? | On July 10, 1962, the first commercially funded satellite, Telstar I was launched into orbit. It was paid for by the American Telephone and Telegraph. It was the first true communications satellite that could relay data, voice and television. The f irst broadcast was relayed from America to England and showed an American flag flapping in the breeze. The Early Bird satellite launched in 1965 provided regular telephone service with 240 telephone circuits. |
| January 9, 1998 | Nichole (age 10, Connecticut, USA) | In the future, could we ever live on the moon? | It sure seems like a possibility! In fact many people hope that a colony will be set up in the next century. This lunar colony would support astronomical and mining activities. I've heard the colony already referred to as Moon Town. |
| January 6, 1998 | Katie (age 10, Louisiana, USA) | How many people live in the space station? | Three seems to be the magic number. There are 3 men living on the Russian space station Mir right now (Anatoly Solovyov, Pavel Vinogradov and David Wolf). When the International Space Station is built the first crew will be three men (Bill Sheperd, Yuri Gidzenko and Sergie Krikalev). |
| December 30, 1997 | Bri (age 13, Colorado, USA) | Is it possible to send a probe to Mars, gather information on Mars and its atmosphere? Then we could try and find different chemicals to dissolve a part of the atmosphere. We could raise the temperature until all the ice was melted creating water so we can live there. | Actually, a NASA probe just reached Mars. It is called the Mars Surveyor. It will map the entire surface of Mars. After this we will have a better understanding of the Martian atmosphere and the pola r ice caps. Melting this ice may not be worthwhile (say to a colonist living there) because scientists think that the ice caps may be made up of carbon dioxide ice. |
| December 30, 1997 | Robert (age 10, Florida, USA) | Of all the space probes launched (over the past 30 years) can and does NASA transmit and receive pictures and data from them still...i.e. when a space probe nears the end of the solar system... and the previous mars lander...If NASA still keeps in tou ch with them....which ones are they.......and how far away can the probes get before we loose contact? | The main (ancient) spaceprobes which NASA keeps in contact with are Voyagers 1 & 2, Pioneer 10 & 11. These are out in deep space taking measurements which will show where the edge of the solar system is. Data is taken about every 6 months. There are n
o pictures however. The cameras are turned off becuase they are essentially too far away to see anything very clearly. By taking data this way NASA will find out, by the time the edge of the solar system is found, from just how far away data can be sent by a spacecraft. Right now scientist expect that the edge of the solar system may be as far away as 100 Astronomical Un it (the average distance from the sun to the earth). |
| December 30, 1997 | Christopher (age 20, Illinois, USA) | Is it possible to use electricity as a means of travel in space? Maybe as in a floating tunnel sort-of-way? And is it possible to heat the Martian icecaps with a laser from an orbiting satellite? | Traveling in space using electricity may be possible, but no engineer I know of has figured it out. This is a(way) futuristic idea. Heating the martian polar caps with a laser is also possible, but there would not be much effect. You'd have to have an (impossibly) powerful laser to have any effect at all, and such a large laser is currently impossible to fly with present spacecraft we have. |
| December 8, 1997 | David | Will we be able to live on other planets? | Probably. Mars is the most likely planet humans will try to colonize first since it is more similar to Earth than any of the other planets. NASA plans to send a manned mission to the Red Planet by the year 2020. See Audrey's question below for link s to other questions about inhabiting Mars. |
| December 8, 1997 | Audrey (age 8, Oregon, USA) | Has a person ever stepped on Mars? Is Mars really hot? | No one has stepped onto the planet Mars yet, but NASA expects to send a manned mission to Mars by the year 2020. Mars is definitely not hot--expect chilly temperatures around -63o F! Check out some of our previously asked Ask a Scienti st questions to learn more about who will be first on Mars and what it would be like to live on Mars. |
Last modified February 20, 2008 by Eduardo Araujo-Pradere.
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