because the gravity vortex and the central pull called the Reist foundation takes longer to get to a place in space
Time doesn't affect space. Space and time are the same thing in relativity; that's why we call it spacetime. Mass affects spacetime and spacetime affects mass.
The reason why space station are that important is because humans body normally can't live in space. There are different factors that when in space can affect humans body and space station or spacecraft's role is to support humans to remain in space for a period of time.
Physics. The study of matter and its motion relative to space and time the matter occupies
"Gravity is a distortion in the Space-Time Continuum" -Albert Einstein...
No, not at all.
It is hot but it dosen't affect anything.:)
Gravity affects the fabric of space-time. So both space and time will be distorted.
Time doesn't affect space. Space and time are the same thing in relativity; that's why we call it spacetime. Mass affects spacetime and spacetime affects mass.
It doesn't necessarily affect space itself but it can affect the Earth's tilt or axis in space.
no. it is the environment that you put the orange in that matters
Food, space, and water most directly affect the amount of people a region can support over time.
Food, space, and water most directly affect the amount of people a region can support over time.
The reason why space station are that important is because humans body normally can't live in space. There are different factors that when in space can affect humans body and space station or spacecraft's role is to support humans to remain in space for a period of time.
The reason why space station are that important is because humans body normally can't live in space. There are different factors that when in space can affect humans body and space station or spacecraft's role is to support humans to remain in space for a period of time.
Physics. The study of matter and its motion relative to space and time the matter occupies
Food, space, and water
This is a pretty vague question, but an event horizon is essentially the "point of no return" in a black hole. It is where the fabric of space-time is beginning to bend and soon rip.