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  2. Harbor Freight Tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harbor_Freight_Tools

    Harbor Freight Tools, commonly referred to as Harbor Freight, is an American privately held tool and equipment retailer, headquartered in Calabasas, California. It operates a chain of retail stores, as well as an e-commerce business.

  3. Reaction control system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reaction_control_system

    RCS thrusters on the nose of Discovery, a Space Shuttle orbiter. The suborbital X-15 and a companion training aero-spacecraft, the NF-104 AST , both intended to travel to an altitude that rendered their aerodynamic control surfaces unusable, established a convention for locations for thrusters on winged vehicles not intended to dock in space ...

  4. Thrusters (spacecraft) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thrusters_(spacecraft)

    Some devices that are used or proposed for use as thrusters are: Cold gas thruster; Electrohydrodynamic thruster, using ionized air (only for use in an atmosphere) Electrodeless plasma thruster, electric propulsion using ponderomotive force; Electrostatic ion thruster, using high-voltage electrodes; Hall effect thruster, a type of ion thruster

  5. Liquid apogee engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_Apogee_Engine

    In some parts of the space industry an LAE is also referred to as a liquid apogee motor (LAM), a liquid apogee thruster (LAT) and, depending on the propellant, a dual-mode liquid apogee thruster (DMLAT). Despite the ambiguity with respect to the use of engine and motor in these names, all use liquid propellant.

  6. Monopropellant rocket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopropellant_rocket

    The power for the thruster comes from the high pressure gas created during the decomposition reaction that allows a rocket nozzle to speed up the gas to create thrust. The most commonly used monopropellant is hydrazine (N 2 H 4, or H 2 N−NH 2), a compound unstable in the presence of a catalyst and which is also a strong reducing agent.

  7. What happens if an astronaut floats off into space? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2018-02-08-what-happens-if-an...

    It’s one of NASA's most iconic images. Bruce McCandless II free-floating in space more than 320 feet away from the Challenger space shuttle.