Assuming that there is no bacterial infection, and the normal healing process occurs, the space will eventually "disappear." What happens is that the bone supporting the tooth, or the tooth socket, will resorb. If it was the last molar in the arch, then you don't have anything to worry about, the teeth will not likely shift back into that space. The teeth tend to shift forward, so if there is a molar behind the empty space, it may "drift" and eventually fill in the space, at least to some degree. This is not desirable, and most people avoid this problem by getting a bridge, which replaces the lost tooth with a fake one (pontic). This fake tooth will be connected to and stabilized by the teeth adjacent to it.
Empty space implies radiation.
The Cytoplasm is located in the "empty space" around the cell.
Empty space is a vacuum.
An empty space is called Vacuum.
dense
Rutherford.
Essentially yes - it is empty space. there may be some stray particles now and then but for the most part it is empty.
In empty space, ie in a vacuum
a plant will get air from the empty space in the soil
yes most of the universe is empty space
D: Empty space.
Empty Spaces was created in 1979.