Probably, an asteroid.
One AU, or Astronomical Unit, is the distance from the Sun to the Earth. The only things at 2 AU from the Sun are asteroids.
A Neutron Star.
It isn't. Kinetic energy is 1/2 x mass x speed squared, so if an object has mass, and it moves, it follows that it has kinetic energy.
No object. You would have to be in between the Sun and Mercury in order to see it at midnight, and no such object exists.
The voyager space probes that visited the outer planets in the 70's and 80's, Voyager 1 and Voyager 2. Voyager 1 flew by Jupiter and Saturn, while the Voyager 2 probe visited all four gas giant planets; Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. Voyager 1 is the furthest man made object from Earth at around 122AU from Earth as of September 2012. That is 122 times the distance between the Earth and Sun.
The first hottest layer is the Thermosphere because it is near space and closest to the sun. The other hot layer is the __________ (please answer if you know).
1) The path of one object orbiting another object is a straight path in a curved space time. 2) The curvature of space time is caused by the mass of the objects.
There are two forces responsible for an object to stay in orbit Namely-- 1-Centripetal Force --Which pulls any object toward the center 2-Centrifugal Force --Which push any object away from the center
Voyager 1 is now the farthest man-made object from earth. As of September 26, 2008, it is about 107.58 AU (16.093 billion km, or 9.94 billion miles) from the Sun, and has thus entered the heliosheath, the termination shock region between the solar system and interstellar space. As of September 26, 2008, Voyager 2 is at a distance of around 87.03 AU (13.019 billion km, or 8.077 billion miles) from the Sun , deep in the scattered disc, and traveling outward at roughly 3.28 AUs per year. It is more than twice as far from the Sun as Pluto.
When talking about objects in outer space, such as the Sun in this case, you shouldn't ask "how light" or "how heavy" it is; the correct term is "how massive". The reason for this is that mass is a property of an object that doesn't change, whereas weight depends on the mass of another object in the same neighborhood, not just on the mass of the one object. In any case, the Sun is quite massive; approximately 2 x 1030 kilograms. That's roughly 330,000 times the mass of planet Earth.
antarctica
Space Racers - 2014 Here Comes the Sun was released on: USA: 2 May 2014
Depends on the mass of the object and the distance it is from the sun. Fg=(G*m1*m2)/(d^2)
That is called the area.
The first object found in space by the human eye was obviously the sun, some Millions years ago when humanity first looked up at the sky. And by telescope? Ganymede, the largest moon of Jupiter and the largest moon in the Solar System.
He was origionally born in Orlando then he emigrated to aus then he left and moved to aus 2
a neutron star
A Neutron Star.