No, kites need both wind and gravity to work.. and neither of those are in space.
Kick or kite would work.
Not from Earth. There are a couple of reasons. There is no 'air' in space, so there would be nothing to blow the kite once it left the Earth's atmosphere. The second is that the length of the string would make it too heavy to get that high. The size of the kite would have to be huge in order to support enough string to get that high. There are 'solar winds' that come off the sun. Some science fiction writers have contemplated the ability for vessels to travel away from stars on these currents.
no.
A non flying kite would defeat the purpose of it being a kite entirely.
You would use square units, such as square centimeters or square inches, to measure the area of a kite. This is because the area represents the total space inside the shape, which is a two-dimensional measurement.
The kite runner is a person, not a part of a kite. A kite race would be held in which there were teams of two, usually young boys. One would cut down the other kites. When a kite was cut, their partner, the kite runner would run to be the first to retrieve the kite.
I have known that it will not work in space while you are in the space shuttle. But it is a good thing that it works on earth but the bad thing is that it doesn't work in space. Answered by:SAV
bernoulli's principle
There is no oxygen in space and fire needs oxygen.
Same as any kite, they got a scrap peice if mateirial and two peices of wood,renob
The opposite word of space is crowded. Or even cramped would work.
Same as a square, except the kite only occupies half the space. (Draw a picture if you have to.) So, 6x8 = 48, divided by two is 24 [sq. cm]