Q&A

What is the difference between rocket and space shuttle?

What is the difference between rocket and space shuttle?

A rocket is a non-reusable launch vehicle. Once a rocket is launched, it will be irrecoverably lost in the process of taking the payload into the desired orbit. This means that a rocket is a one-way vehicle. In contrast, a space shuttle is reusable.

What rocket carried the space shuttle?

Space Shuttle

Size
Last flight July 21, 2011
Notable payloads Tracking and data relay satellites Spacelab Hubble Space Telescope Galileo Magellan Ulysses Compton Gamma Ray Observatory Mir Docking Module Chandra X-ray Observatory ISS components
Boosters – Solid Rocket Boosters
Engines 2 solid-fuel rocket motors

Are spaceships and rockets the same thing?

As nouns the difference between spaceship and rocket is that spaceship is a vehicle that flies through space while rocket is a rocket engine or rocket can be the leaf vegetable eruca sativa” or ”eruca vesicaria .

How many rockets are on a space shuttle?

The Space Shuttle consists of three major components: the Orbiter which houses the crew; a large External Tank that holds fuel for the main engines; and two Solid Rocket Boosters which provide most of the Shuttle’s lift during the first two minutes of flight.

Is the space shuttle considered an aircraft?

It operates as an aircraft within the atmosphere and as a launcher(rocket)-orbiter combination outside the atmosphere. It takes-off and flies within the atmosphere like an aircraft, using air-breathing engines. The Space Shuttle is the orbiter of a launcher(rocket)-orbiter combination.

What is inside a space shuttle?

The U.S. space shuttle consisted of three major components: a winged orbiter that carried both crew and cargo; an external tank containing liquid hydrogen (fuel) and liquid oxygen (oxidizer) for the orbiter’s three main rocket engines; and a pair of large, solid-propellant, strap-on booster rockets.

What human made object has gone the farthest in space?

Voyager 1
Speeding towards Rasalhague and the other stars that make up the ‘Serpent-bearer’ is Voyager 1, the furthest human-made object in the Universe. It’s currently 14.1 billion miles (22.8 billion km) from the Sun and speeding away at roughly 38,000 mph (61,000 km/h).

What fuel do rockets use?

The petroleum used as rocket fuel is a type of highly refined kerosene, called RP-1 in the United States. Petroleum fuels are usually used in combination with liquid oxygen as the oxidizer.

What are two challenges of living in space?

Promiscuity and Psychological Challenges Living in weightlessness, our points of reference gone, confinement, no space to move around, the distance from Earth… All this requires solid nerves, to say the least, and optimal physical fitness.