The earth would take so much impact that it would be game over as if Chuck Norris roundhouse kicked the core. BOOM!
One kilometer is a unit of length, not an object. It is equivalent to 1000 meters or approximately 0.62 miles.
It would depend on the velocity of the object you are measuring.
Approximately six city blocks
You're measuring one of the pair of gravitational forces between the Earth and the object. The strength of the forces depends on the mass of the object and the mass of the Earth. It also depends on the distance between their centers, but that's typically just the radius of the Earth (the distance from the Earth's center to the surface). The one we read on the scale is the force attracting the object to the Earth. It's what we call the "weight" of the object on Earth. The other force in the pair acts in exactly the opposite direction. That one is the force attracting the Earth to the object. We don't have to measure it because it has exactly the same strength as the first one. Nobody ever talks about it, but if we did, we would have to call it the Earth's weight on the object.
one kilometer.
Well, I'm not gonna tell you but I'll give you a hint. It lives in my pants and grows up to one mile
a kilometer
Kilometer
One kilometer is 1000 meters, so a kilometer is bigger.
The orbits of any object orbiting any other object is an ellipse. The central object (the Sun, in the case of the Earth) is in one of the focal points of the ellipse.
Kilometer
One kilometer is 1,000 meters.