8 million pounds
v = a t a = v / t Bonus: t = v / a
If the true value is t and the calculated or measured value is v then absolute error = |v - t|, the absolute value of (v - t).If v >= t then the absolute value is v - tif v
It depends on the speed: t = s/v
what is VVT-I
I assume that the "speed" equation is velocity equals distance divided by time (v=d/t). To get 't' on the left side, we'll multiply both sides by 't': (vt=dt/t) and the two 't's on the right side cancel out (because t divided by t is 1): (vt=d). Now we move the v to the right side by dividing both sides by 'v': (vt/v=d/v). Just the 't's in the step before, now we have a v divided by a v on the left side, so they cancel out, and our final equation is time equals distance divided by velocity: t=d/v
The saturn V first stage produced thirty-four mega newtons of thrust by five F-1 engines.
Varies depending on the rocket. The tallest, heaviest and most powerful rocket ever manufactured, the Saturn V, produces 7.5 million pounds of thrust.
None! NASA decomissioned Saturn V years ago - see: "How many humours are there in the human body?"
7,648,000 pounds-force (34,020,000 N)
The Saturn V, fully loaded with fuel and payload, had 2.8 million kilograms of mass. On Earth, then, standing on the pad before launch, it weighed 6.173 million pounds, which is the same thing as 27.46 million newtons. Any force greater than that, even one ounce or one newton greater, would have lifted it off. The Saturn V's engines produced 34.02 million newtons of thrust, which was enough to not only lift it off of the ground, but produce considerable acceleration besides.
5 Million Newtons was the pressure exerted by Saturn v rocket
The weight of a Saturn V rocket just before launch is approximately 3 039 000 Kg.
Just 1, although it had multiple stages. To Clarify The Saturn V Rocket is a 3 stage rocket system as the Americans like to say The First stage had five individual main thrust engines Second had three Third stage had one
saturn v did not land the moon but was the luna module
The rocket that launched the Apollo spacecrafts was the Saturn V. There were no Apollo rockets that began with a T
It was the fifth rocket in the Saturn-class, named after the planet Saturn, or the Mythological god Saturn.
Apollo 11 was the name of the spaceflight as a whole, the rocket used was the Saturn V (Saturn 5). Figures of around 160 million horsepower at its peak have been brandished about, but a rockets power should really be measured by the thrust, in terms of pounds-force or Newtons. At its peak, the Saturn V rocket produced 7,648,000 pounds-force (34 million Newtons)