What part of rocket falls off?

According to NASA
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, after traveling about 24 vertical miles, the boosters break away from the rest of the rocket. Those that lift off from NASA space center fall via parachute, and land in the Atlantic Ocean.
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What falls off a rocket when it launches?

As this water vapour collects and cools further it freezes into patches of ice and the intense forces during launch cause the ice chunks to fall away.
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Why do rocket parts that fall off?

When the boosters run out of fuel, they are detached from the rest of the rocket (usually with some kind of small explosive charge or explosive bolts) and fall away. The first stage then burns to completion and falls off. This leaves a smaller rocket, with the second stage on the bottom, which then fires.
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What happens to the detached parts of a rocket?

Historically, most of a rocket's discarded parts were left to fall back down to Earth and burn up in the atmosphere. But starting in the 1980s with NASA's space shuttle, engineers designed rocket parts that could be recovered and reused.
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Are parts of Apollo 13 still in space?

The Apollo 13 Command Module "Odyssey" is now at the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center, Hutchinson, Kansas. It was originally on display at the Musee de l'Air, Paris, France.
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Space Shuttle Columbia - Disaster Video [With Real Video] | Mayday: Air Disaster (4K)



Who died on Apollo 13?

Apollo 13 crew

The Apollo 13 astronauts were commander James Lovell, lunar module pilot Fred Haise, and command module pilot John "Jack" Swigert.
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What happens to rocket upper stages?

Upper Stage Overview

Upper stages propel payloads on interplanetary trajectories, or into orbits higher than could otherwise be reached using a rocket booster. Often, upper stage engines can be restarted several times while in space.
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What is the bottom of a rocket called?

Payload: This is the cargo that's being carried into space by the rocket. It can be a satellite, telescope, supplies, or even crew for the International Space Station. Stage 1: This is the section at the bottom of the rocket stack containing the main engines that lift the rocket off the launch pad.
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What's the top of a rocket called?

The nose cone carries the payload or cargo. Common payloads include astro- nauts, satellites, scientific instruments, and even explosives. The nose cone may also contain the guidance system that controls the flight direction of the rocket. To minimize friction, the nose cone should have a rounded or bullet shape.
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What are the parts of a rocket?

The four main parts are the structure (body), payload, guidance, and propulsion. These parts are usually stacked on top of each other. The payload is the top, then the guidance, and lastly the propulsion.
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What is the name of a small section of a spacecraft that detaches from the main part?

Spacecraft themselves can have parts which can separate or are separated from them as part of their work, or mission. For human spacecraft, these are often called modules.
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How does a rocket take off?

Rockets take off by burning fuel. Burning fuel produces gas as a byproduct, which escapes the rocket with a lot of force. The force of the gas escaping provides enough thrust to power the rocket upwards and escape the the force of gravity pulling it back to Earth.
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How do rockets leave Earth?

Earth's gravity is still pulling down on the rocket. When a rocket burns propellants and pushes out exhaust, that creates an upward force called thrust. To launch, the rocket needs enough propellants so that the thrust pushing the rocket up is greater than the force of gravity pulling the rocket down.
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What do the fins do on a rocket?

Fins control direction and stability

The stability of a rocket is its ability to keep flying through the air pointing in the right direction without wobbling or tumbling. Fins are used on smaller rockets to provide this stability and control direction.
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How does a spaceship leave Earth?

In order to leave orbit, a spacecraft needs to be going fast enough to break free of gravity. A huge push is needed to do that. Either that push was given to a ship as it was launched or it is given to a ship already in orbit.
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What are 4 parts of a rocket?

There are four major systems in a full scale rocket; the structural system, the payload system, the guidance system, and the propulsion system. The structural system, or frame, is similar to the fuselage of an airplane.
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What are the 4 main parts of a rocket and their function?

There are four major components to any full scale rocket; the structural system, or frame, the payload system, the guidance system, and the propulsion system. The propulsion of a rocket includes all of the parts which make up the rocket engine; the tanks pumps, propellants, power head, and rocket nozzle .
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What is the body tube in a rocket?

The body tube forms the main body of the model rocket and holds the nose cone (the tip of the rocket) in place. The rocket fins at the bottom of the rocket provide stability during flight. A launch lug is attached to the body tube near the center of gravity for the rocket.
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What happens after lift off?

One minute after liftoff, the first six solid rocket strap-ons were discarded. The other three burned out strap-on boosters were jettisoned, while the first stage continued to burn. The remaining strap-on boosters are then ignited, and then jettisioned.
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What happens to 2nd stage rockets?

Stage II is restartable, and fires twice. The first burn occurs during the final portion of the boost phase and is used to insert the second and third stage spacecraft stack into a low Earth orbit. The second stage is programmed to shut itself off once the rocket and spacecraft are in orbit around Earth.
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What happens to a space rocket after launch?

Sixty-six seconds after liftoff the 6 solid rocket "strap-ons" are discarded and fall into the ocean. Three of the six solid rocket strap-ons will be discarded first, and the other three strap-on boosters will be jettisoned one second later, while the first stage continues to burn.
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Has anyone been lost in space?

Fatal space travel disasters. As of the beginning of 2022, there have been five fatal incidents during space flights, in which 19 astronauts were lost in space and four more astronauts died on Earth in preparation for the flight.
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Which Apollo blew up and killed?

The Apollo 1 fire that killed three was on Jan. 27, 1967, while the Columbia disaster that killed seven happened on Feb. 1, 2003.
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Did they find the bodies of the Challenger crew?

In March 1986, the remains of the astronauts were found in the debris of the crew cabin. Though all of the important pieces of the shuttle were retrieved by the time NASA closed its Challenger investigation in 1986, most of the spacecraft remained in the Atlantic Ocean.
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