0%. Outer space is filled by Maxwell's Aether with "free space Resistance" z= W/Q =375 Ohms, where W and Q are electromagnetic Charges.
Planck's Constant h=QW.
Yes, it is.
No air
It is definitely "something". Empty space has no matter, but it turns out that the structure of empty space itself is extremely complicated.
Stars are probably called stars because of some Latin/Greek word root that I don't know about and Outer Space is called Outer Space because its outer (Outside the world) and is just empty space. Hope I helped.
Stars are probably called stars because of some Latin/Greek word root that I don't know about and Outer Space is called Outer Space because its outer (Outside the world) and is just empty space. Hope I helped.
If the space is in outer space there can be no gas against which a terminal velocity can occur
No, it does not make sense to say that a textbook is about 99.9 percent empty space. A textbook is typically filled with content, such as text, images, and diagrams, so it is not accurate to describe it as mostly empty space.
No, it doesn't make sense to say that a textbook is about 99.9 percent empty space. A textbook is filled with information, illustrations, text, and other content, so it is not accurate to describe it as mostly empty space.
The vast majority of the space in the galaxy is completely empty.
besides oxygen, there is nothing. It is anti-matter. sound doesnt even travel in outer space. There is absoloutley no gases in empty space if you dont include stars and planets, ect.
The sky consists of the atmosphere and the clouds. At night we can often see right past all that into outer space, with the Moon, planets and stars. In between those objects space is (almost) empty.
Well, id you were just in empty outer space-you would way absoloutley nothing. There is no gravity in outer space, the planets provide the gravity. But if you were talking about the moon, a 100 pound person would weight 12 pounds on the moon.