The presence or absence of spacecraft near Mars will have
no effect whatsoever on the planet's gravitational field.
It becomes bigger :)
When a comet nears the sun, and begins to out-gas, solar wind pushes the particles away. as the comet nears the sun, more & more particles are emitted, and the tail grows.
They are generally brittle.
A Planetary Nebula
Tsunamis happen in coastal areas. The tsunami is a huge wave generated by an under-sea earthquake. The quake pushes a piece of the earth upwards, which triggers a deep wave to form. As the wave nears the coast, the front of the wave slows down as the water reaches land. However - the back of that makes the wave 'rear up' to perhaps fifty feet or more in height.
If ozone nears ground, it will act as a pollutant. It causes breathing problems.
Gravity
The word nears is a verb form. It is the present tense, third person singular of the verb 'to near.'
Nepal
It is: 486.13
6.1
No. The sun will never turn into a black hole. It isn't scientifically possible. Rather, when the sun nears the end of its fuels supply it will expand, consuming Mercury, Venus, and probably Earth.
The anagrams are earns, nears, and saner.
It becomes bigger :)
As Friday the 13th nears, Dawson begins to plan a party. But all good is cut short when a serial killer nears Capeside.
There are several words that can be made from the letters in the word ravens. Some examples are snare, saver, earns, nears, vans, vane, and nears
The answer depends on where you want to control it. When launched, a rocket is controlled by the movement of fins that act like ailerons on an airplane. Since there is no air in space, ailerons are of no use in space, so once in space, spacecrafts must steer by firing very small rockets and change their orbits by firing a much larger rocket. Interplanetary spacecrafts rely on small rockets as well, but they also can be controlled by taking advantage of a slingshot effect of a nearby planet. When a spacecraft nears a planet, it's speed increases. If it gets close enough to a planet, the planet's gravity can chance the path of the spacecraft and send it off in a different direction. This method has been used successfully several times over the last 40 years.