No. Sound requires a medium through which to travel, and to all intents and purposes Space is a vacuum. (It contains some gas and dust but at vanishingly low density.)
The answere is no.
Light travels in vacuum but sound cannot. So, we can see solar flares but can't hear them. (Outer space can be considered to be vacuum)
BAAAAAAAAM!
No "space" is mostly a vacuum. No sound is transmitted in a vacuum. You would not hear a starship exploding either!
sound waves cannot travel through space
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 throughyour bottom and your feet and all up and down your spine. You would be in bigtrouble.If you were outside of it, you would hear nothing.
No,because in space there's no gravity and depending on how far you're from Earth you cannot hear any type of sounds. For example your alarm clock can ring and your neighbors are unable to hear it.People cannot hear an alarm clock from space not just people but other living things.
I'm not sure which explosions you're referring to. But if an explosion were tooccur near a manned spacecraft, the people on board could not hear it.
Which movie proclainmed that "In Space no one can hear you scream?"
i dont know who she is , but u cant hear any thing in space >.>
We can't speak or hear in space because there is no air the sound can travel through.
No.