With no atmosphere and no magnetic field, the Moon's surface is exposed directly to the solar wind. Over its 4 billion year lifetime many ions from the solar wind have become embedded in the Moon's regolith. Thus samples of regolith returned by the Apollo missions proved valuable in studies of the solar wind
no, the moon has no atmosphere, so there is no wind or any other weather of any kind; in fact, the footsteps of the first astronauts to step on the moon are still there and haven't changed one bit
if there was a man on the moon and there is no wind or atmostphere, howcome in the in the 1960`s clip of Neil Armstrong put the flag into the the flag was waving as if there was some type of wind.../ any explination for that..
Answer In our Solar System, Saturn's moon - Titan is the only moon with an atmosphere. Hence there are storms only on Titan. Answer Yes sir indeed,there sure can be storms on any moon.Its just that we dont have the right interlect of our equipment to observe the surface of a raging storm on any moon ever discovered.
Yes, there is. On Earth, dust is annoying. On the moon, it's downright dangerous.
There are concerns that the dust found on the lunar surface could cause harmful effects on any manned outpost technology and crew members:
There is always friction any time one mass touches any other. Having said that, in space outside the Earth's atmosphere, the amount of mass in space (aside from meteoroids and other space rocks) is measured in atoms per cubic meter. That's as close as we're likely to come to "frictionless".
But in the long run, all of the satellites now in orbit will EVENTUALLY fall, because of the friction of even that minuscule bit of mass that is between the Earth and the Moon's orbit.
The only place without friction is a perfect vacuum. Space, while mostly vacuum, still contains particles and these provide some friction, but it is very, very low.
No. Wind is moving air, and there's no air in space.
Very little because there is essential no atmosphere.
Yes. There can be fire in outer space as long as there is something to burn (like oxygen).
There's no weather on the Moon. That should make the answer pretty easy to guess.
An object can be at rest with or without friction. An object floating in outer space can be at rest. An object that is glued to the floor can also be at rest.
Usually not. To slow a moving object down, some force must act on the moving object. On Earth, this force is usually friction. In outer space, there is no significant amount of friction, so moving objects tend to continue moving, unless they are slowed down by OTHER forces, such as gravity.
No they can not operate in outer space.
Yes, gold is from outer space
That depends on what you mean by "outer space". The moon is outside the Earth's atmosphere and therfore "in space" but it is orbiting the Earth and therfore hardly "outer".
outer space travel work by gravity and friction plus magentism
Becasue there's no air and therefore no friction
An object can be at rest with or without friction. An object floating in outer space can be at rest. An object that is glued to the floor can also be at rest.
Meteors are rocks from outer space that strike the Earth's atmosphere and are heated to incandescence (glowing heat) by friction. Most are completely vaporized, but some do fall to Earth.
No. But in outer space, friction is quite insignificant for most practical purposes; that's why planets can orbit their stars for billions of years.
Friction slows objects down, changing kinetic energy into thermal energy. Usually an object from outer space will be travelling very, very fast as it enters the atmosphere and the friction (from the air resistance) will slow it down a lot. This energy is converted to heat, which is why objects can burn up in the atmosphere.
Hardly. There are a few atoms of gas in outer space, but their density is so low that for most practical applications, they can be ignored.
Usually not. To slow a moving object down, some force must act on the moving object. On Earth, this force is usually friction. In outer space, there is no significant amount of friction, so moving objects tend to continue moving, unless they are slowed down by OTHER forces, such as gravity.
outer (as in "outer space")
i think it is the gravityand the existence of atmosphere which is a cause of friction since there is no gravity on space that is why there is no friction
they built it in outer space
There is no antonym for outer space.