most of space is a vacuum
volume
Well, it would be in outer space, but you can see them by looking up at the sky.
if you mean with outer space is outside the orbit of earth, then the answer is no. space outside the gravitational orbit of any planet is a vacuum and nothing can move in a vacuum; be it a bottle or the soda in the bottle, whichever you mean.
No. The proportion volume taken up by the protons in an atom is incredibly small. The vast majority of the volume of an atom is empty space.
A measuring cup is one such device. A dipstick is also used to measure the space taken up by a liquid, although the answer is rarely given in standard units.
Most of space is taken up by the rarest, least dense nothingness imaginable.
Nothingness.
Most of space is taken up by the rarest, least dense nothingness imaginable.
we have outer space because what else is going to hold the planets up and not let them fall forever, that's what our sun does, and outer space holds the sun up
peice by peice
From sea level it's about 480 KM up until outer space. That's 48,000,000 cm.
false
The space taken up by an object is called volume.
Astronomy is the study of the outer space. If you look up at the sky at night you are looking at outer space which is astronomy.
As astronaut travels into outer space and some have been killed doing so. Most astronomers stay on the planet Earth and look up into space. There have been astronauts who are astronomers, but, most astronomers are not astronauts. There have been tens of millions of astronomers looking up at outer space, but, only a few hundred astronauts. No, they are not the same.
The thing that takes up the most space of an atom at about 99.99% of the size of the atom is empty space. The majority of the remaining 0.01% is found in the nucleus and about 0.00001% of the atom is taken by the electrons.
Most objects in outer space are moving under the gravitational attraction of other galaxies or galactic clusters. The attractive force speeds them up rather than slows them down.