If you were inside it, in a "shirt-sleeve" environment with air to breathe inside,
it would sound like a deafening 'BANG', or a THUMP that you could feel through
your bottom and your feet and all up and down your spine. You would be in big
trouble.
If you were outside of it, you would hear nothing.
No "space" is mostly a vacuum. No sound is transmitted in a vacuum. You would not hear a starship exploding either!
A spaceship.
A spaceship.
Um. . . No. There is not an exploding pizza in space. That would only happen if someone invented one, which wouldn't really happen. Sorry. :)
There is no star near mars.If there was, and it did explode, then you would not be alive to see it, let alone hear it.Sound cannot travel in a vacuum, so although you may see it, you would not hear it.
Well ii would suck it up back inside of the spaceship then go back to earth a go put it in the dumpster.
As loud as sound would be normally.
Lots of money to buy a spaceship then a good pilot to take you up there :)
die
Ships should be parked in protective revetments or at safe distance(s) .
No, a spaceship traveling into the moon would not produce a shockwave because there is no atmosphere on the moon for the shockwave to propagate through. Shockwaves need a medium like air or water to travel through, so in the vacuum of space or on the airless moon, a shockwave would not be generated as the spaceship impacts the surface.
Yes it does. It would be louder than a million atomic bombs exploding at the same time (continuously). The only thing that separates us from that shattering sound is the emptiness of space, otherwise known as vacuum. Sound waves can't travel through a vacuum.