Space Fact #6: How Fast Does It Take to Reach Outer Space?
/To get into low Earth orbit—a path in which the forces of motion balance the pull of gravity—a rocket has to attain a speed of about 17,000 miles per hour.
Read MoreTo get into low Earth orbit—a path in which the forces of motion balance the pull of gravity—a rocket has to attain a speed of about 17,000 miles per hour.
Read MoreHow I worked with a team to create the perfect spot for a new station--along with a railroad grade through space.
Read MoreThe Gravity Well constitutes a challenge of speed, ingenuity, and brute force.
Read MoreTo understand the Gravity Well, just for a moment stop thinking of it as a well. Imagine instead a bowl-shaped valley, and a little kid riding a tricycle on the sidewalk.
Read MoreIt really wasn’t that long ago when the two greatest superpowers were vying to put satellites into space. Now, 50 nations have their own satellites in low Earth orbit. If you’re a Thailand, say, you can call Space Systems/Loral, a Canadian-owned company based in Palo Alto, California, and tell them you want to put a satellite into geostationary orbit for television broadcasting or military communications. You can have the thing in orbit 25,000 miles above Earth within two years.