Yes and No
No because sound needs oxygen to travle
Yes, because if you make sound, it will still be sound, just no one, not even you, can hear it.
Space doesn't have a sound.
Does sound occupied space?
There is no air in space and because of that, the noise it makes can not transmit elsewhere. The sound it makes is well noticeable inside the craft though. Sound moves through the materials the shuttle is built from and then it starts transmitting these sounds into the air on board, and this noise is very well audible. I am sorry to say, but I can not explain the sound it actually makes. maybe there is something on Nasa homepage regarding this.
Explain vibrations, which they can feel. Then explain that sound is vibrations carried through the air.
Sound is a vibration. It can travel through anything that can vibrates, such as air, water, metal, rock, and pretty much anything that you can think of. If it can vibrate, it can theoretically transmit sound. This is why space is absolutely silent and even an explosion would be silent. Sound could exist in space if a medium such as some solid, liquid, or gas was provided
No. Space has the long A (ay) sound, and the E is silent.
No. Sound is the vibration of air. Sound will not travel in a vacuum. Space is a vacuum
Sound in oxygen is slow moving, but sound in space is not possible(by space, I mean a vacuum)
There is no sound in space or a vacuum.
Space is a vacuum. Sound cannot travel in vacuum
There is no sound in space.
You can't hear sound in space