There is no defining line between the Earth's atmosphere and the vacuum of space. It is generally considered to be about 100 kilometres from the surface of the Earth. That would make the distance 328,084 feet.
Space begins at a height of approximately 62 miles above the earth. However, it should be noted that sometimes 50 or 60 miles is used as the marker as well. In the U.S. astronaut status is awarded to those who fly over 50 miles high.
There are many levels of atmosphere around the Earth as you move from ground into space, 5 levels as we have modeled them.
The first is the Troposphere, which reaches out ~20,000 feet - 65,600 feet (6-20 km) from ground level. Mt. Everest is about this high. Most planes, etc remain in this level.
The second is the Stratosphere, which reaches out ~164,000 feet (50 km). Weather balloons are able to reach this high into atmosphere.
The third is the Mesosphere, which reaches ~279,000 feet (85 km) from ground level. This is generally where meteors burn up and can be seen from the ground.
The fourth is the Thermosphere, which reaches ~2,264,000 feet (690 km). The Aurora Beauralis occurs near the bottom of this level (100 km). Space Shuttles and sattelites reach these distances for orbit.
The final level is called the Exosphere, reaching out about 10,000 km, or 32,808,399 feet into space. This level contains primarily hydrogen and helium that is so sparse that particles rarely interact. It therefore stops acting like a fluid as most atmosphere, 'air'. These particles follow their own trajectories around the earth and can migrate into the magnetosphere (Earth's magnetic field) or into solar winds and outside earth's atmosphere.
The distance from Mars to the Sun varies depending on its orbital position however at the widest point in its orbit it is approximately 155 million miles away which is approximately 818,400,000,000 feet from the Sun.
Its 100 km or 62.1 miles straight up from sea level.
By the official NASA definition, Space is 100 kilometres up from the Earth's surface.
At this point the Earth's atmosphere is considered to be negligible.
Far 2. Endlessly. But if you would travel that long, you would end up in the same place you started since our space-time is spherical :)
Generally accepted at 100 km above earth surface (60 miles)
100km or 62 miles, some say around 120 km.
I think its...im not quite sure but i heard its something like 26 miles!
About 9.84 feet.
3.93 feet
1980 feet
This is not a question that can be answered. A foot is a measurement of distance or length. A cubic foot is a measurement of volume or space. Your question is similar to asking "How many inches to a gallon?" There is no logical answer.
301.837 feet.
The space needle is 499 feet tall.
275 square feet
17000 square feet
328,084
A linear foot has no width, so no matter how many you have of them, you will never cover a 32 x 30 space.
12 cubic feet of space = 89.766 gallons of space (rounded)
If it is nine feet by nine feet, then it is 81 square feet.
It all depends on the actual size of the space. Square footage is measured by multiplying the length of the space by the width. IE: a 6x6 space is 36sq feet.
Space is usually defined to start at about 100 kilometers. You can base your calculations on that.
153.14 square feet.
how many yards of netting this is 61" wide do i need for a space that is 11 feet and 8 inches long?
Calculate square feet by multipying length by width.A 6 by 7 space would have 42 square feet.Answer42 square feet