I think that the Earth looks blue from outer space by an astronomer's eye is because the Earth is 75% water and 25% land. Since water is blue and there is a great quantity of it on the Earth, you spot the blue area first.
The core, mantle and the crust. (There is an inner and outer core, and an inner and outer mantle.)
Because its mostly water.... water is blue
Accually There Are Both Equal In Time Square Earth Helps Water And Water Helps Earth How??? Because theres Water In All 3 States That Help Earth Live On Space In The Air And Earth Helps Water Fufill In The Lands Of Earth
Convection currents are located in the astenosphere in boiling water and lots of other places
the earth the clouds and the water!
We would be in for a world of hurt if the water escaped into outer space. Everyone and everything on Earth would die without water. Lucky for us, the Earth is a mostly self-contained biome.
fire, water,air, earth
No, you cannot see a rainbow in outer space because rainbows are formed by the refraction and reflection of light within water droplets in Earth's atmosphere. Outer space lacks the necessary conditions for rainbows to form.
no because it comes in bubbles that float,for example if I opened a bottle of water there it would float!
No, the blue color of the Earth when seen from outer space is given by the atmosphere, not by the water on it.
Yes, the Earth is losing water due to factors such as evaporation, human consumption, and climate change.
One poundal on the surface of the earth. Approx a sixth of that on the surface of the moon and nothing in outer space.
no it vaporizes
Light passes through the vacuum of outer space as it travels from the sun to the Earth. It does not require a medium such as air or water to propagate.
The water appears blue because it is reflecting the sunlit atmosphere from the relative perspective of the surface of the Earth. (There are other reasons too.)
Yes, there is water in outer space in the form of ice and vapor. It can be found in comets, asteroids, and even in the atmospheres of some planets and moons.