Bonjour, est-ce que vous pouvez m'aider pour mon oral, s'il vous plaît ?
Vous êtes sélectionné pour faire partie de l'équipage de la prochaine mission spatiale vers Mars. Faites un discours pour expliquer les apports de la conquête spatiale passée et ce qu'elle apporterait encore aujourd'hui et dans le futur.
space elevatorSee all related content →Humans have always looked at the heavens and wondered about the nature of the objects seen in the night sky. With the development of rockets and the advances in electronics and other technologies in the 20th century, it became possible to send machines and animals and then people above Earth’s atmosphere into outer space. Well before technology made these achievements possible, however, space exploration had already captured the minds of many people, not only aircraft pilots and scientists but also writers and artists. The strong hold that space travel has always had on the imagination may well explain why professional astronauts and laypeople alike consent at their great peril, in the words of Tom Wolfe in The Right Stuff (1979), to sit “on top of an enormous Roman candle, such as a Redstone, Atlas, Titan or Saturn rocket, and wait for someone to light the fuse.”
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nassifaabdulmajeed
Tu peux me donner une idée de ce qu'on peut faire dans l'espace dans le futur s'il te plaît ?
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space elevator
space elevatorSee all related content →
space elevatorSee all related content →Humans have always looked at the heavens and wondered about the nature of the objects seen in the night sky. With the development of rockets and the advances in electronics and other technologies in the 20th century, it became possible to send machines and animals and then people above Earth’s atmosphere into outer space. Well before technology made these achievements possible, however, space exploration had already captured the minds of many people, not only aircraft pilots and scientists but also writers and artists. The strong hold that space travel has always had on the imagination may well explain why professional astronauts and laypeople alike consent at their great peril, in the words of Tom Wolfe in The Right Stuff (1979), to sit “on top of an enormous Roman candle, such as a Redstone, Atlas, Titan or Saturn rocket, and wait for someone to light the fuse.”