The space station is logically only "protected" from meteors by the earths gravitational field, which would capture anything that is in an erratic orbit, larger objects would be harder to capture, our best defense against meteors is with some kind of radar then computer controlled navigation to avoid them, as far as I know there is no real protection against meteors.
Meteors come in a variety of sizes, so a comparison between the size of the International Space Station (which measures about 100 meters by 70 meters) and any meteor requires that the specific meteor be identified.
In space
yhrough space
Meteors do not explore. Rocks from space can not explore, only living beings can.
yes
yes
Deadliest Space Weather - 2013 Meteors was released on: USA: 17 January 2013
Meteors are seen in the sky when huge space junk enter the atmosphere and burn up.
They don't. Meteors only burn when they enter the tmosphere, where the friction burns them up.
stars, planets, meteors EVERYTHING IN SPACE
At parking meteors
They fly around in space.