No. Space is largely a vacuum.
It has been estimated that as many as 85% of all stars in our galaxy are "white dwarf" stars. Up to 97% of all stars will likely end up as white dwarfs.Correction: About 90% of the stars in space are actually Main Sequence stars.
Cold air does take up space. All matter does.Cold air just takes up less space than warm air.
Because there is no air or water vapor to obscure the stars when you are in space.
The density of the gases in space is so low that we would not term them "air". As you increase in altitude from Sea Level the density of air gradually decreases right up until you reach space. There is no point where there is a sudden change so that someone can say that air has stopped and space has begun. Quite simply, the upper reaches of the atmosphere have been defined by picking an altitude. Below that altitude is "air"; above it is "space".
yes because they levitate in space gravity does hold stars up
Air takes up space because it consists of molecules that have mass and volume. When air molecules are compressed or confined, they exert pressure on their surroundings, demonstrating that they occupy a physical space. This property is known as the compressibility of gases.
Meteors are made up of rocks and ice and dust from space where as shooting stars are falling stars.
Air is a combination of many gases, all of which are matter. The definition of matter is anything that has mass and takes up space. The obvious example is blowing up a balloon. The air occupies the space within the balloon and when enough air is packed into the balloon the membrane of the balloon stretches. This is because no two particles are able occupy the same space at the same time so the particles in the air begin to take up space.
Coming Up for Air - Breathing Space album - was created in 2007.
No, shooting stars do not go up. Shooting stars, also known as meteors, are debris from space that enters Earth's atmosphere and appears as a streak of light as it burns up due to friction with the air. The perception of shooting stars moving across the sky is due to the Earth's rotation and the meteor's trajectory.
Because stars make up galaxies. Though not all of them help make up solar systems. But if there are no stars, then a galaxy becomes a bunch of empty space.
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