What does it feel like to leave Earth and blast into space? Ask Kathy Sullivan. She did it three times—on the space shuttle Challenger.
It starts with a low rumble as the engines start up. “It’s like a giant is pushing on the back of your chair,” she says. It’s similar to the force you feel at the bottom of a roller coaster. Only it lasts for more than 8 minutes.
At first, the ride is rough. It feels like you’re sitting in the middle of an earthquake. Under your seat, engines burn tons of rocket fuel. Little explosions push the shuttle faster by the second.
Then suddenly, the giant’s hand is gone. Blue turns to black outside the window. Pencils and papers float around in zero gravity.
Welcome to outer space.
What does it feel like to blast into space? Ask Kathy Sullivan. She’s done it three times. Each time, she was on the space shuttle Challenger.
It starts with a rumble. That’s the engines starting. “It’s like a giant is pushing on the back of your chair,” she says. It feels like being at the bottom of a roller coaster. But it lasts more than 8 minutes.
The ride is rough at first. It’s like you’re in the middle of an earthquake. Engines burn rocket fuel. Little explosions push the shuttle up. It goes faster by the second.
Then the giant’s hand is gone. What you see outside turns from blue to black. Pencils and papers float around in zero gravity.
Welcome to outer space.
Want to know what it feels like to leave Earth and blast into space? Ask Kathy Sullivan. She’s done it three times—on the space shuttle Challenger.
The trek begins with a low rumble as the engines flare up. “It’s like a giant is pushing on the back of your chair,” Sullivan says. The force is similar to what you feel at the bottom of a roller coaster—but it lasts more than 8 minutes.
At first, the ride is rough, as if you’re sitting in the middle of an earthquake. The engines burn tons of rocket fuel under your seat, and little explosions push the shuttle faster by the second.
Then suddenly, the giant’s hand is gone, blue turns to black outside the window, and pencils and papers float around in zero gravity.
Welcome to outer space.