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If the sun's radiation could not travel through space, then the Earth would be a cold, dark, frozen rock, and nothing would have ever happened on it.
This would happen, space junk could collide with asteroids, but most space junk is close to the earth, away from the main asteroid belt. It would be more likely to collide with meteroids and other bits of space junk.
Your mass in space would be the same as your mass on Earth, but your weight in space would be zero.
The Earth is a sphere. An observer looking up can only see the stars on their side of the planet. As the Earth rotates, it exposes the observer to the other stars visible to their hemisphere. Simply put, the earth gets in the way. If the earth were to disappear and you were floating in space, you could freely look around at the celestial sphere and observe the constellations. The number of constellations visible would be limited only by the range of your vision, which still would be insufficient to see in every direction simultaneously.
You would see the moon.
You can't see "space". You can see objects in space, but space itself is not visible.If you did wish to observe objects in space, a telescope would help you to do so.
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Because it is a gas giant and doesn't have a surface that you could land on, you could just orbit it and observe it from space, which would be a fascinating thing to do. You could land on some of its moons and explore them and observe Jupiter from them.
If the sun's radiation could not travel through space, then the Earth would be a cold, dark, frozen rock, and nothing would have ever happened on it.
If the sun's radiation could not travel through space, then the Earth would be a cold, dark, frozen rock, and nothing would have ever happened on it.
No, in a position where one could see the galaxy as a whole, the earth would appear as a far too insignificant dot, and would likely not even be visible.
It could not, the shuttle cannot leave low earth orbit
That person would observe an eclipse of the sun.
Time would be the least of your problems at the center of the earth. But if we could put a clock there that would be able to function at high temperatures and pressures, I don't think we would observe any time anomalies.
A blue ball in space could be 'Neptune' Earth would match that description as well, for the most part.