Not all occupies space, because air does not take space.
Yes, gas can exist in space. The interstellar medium, which fills the vast majority of space, consists of gas and dust particles. Stars are also made up of gases like hydrogen and helium. However, since space is a vacuum, these gas particles are very spread out compared to the atmosphere on Earth.
All of space, all of time, and everything in them, is called the "Universe".
The microwave energy that fills all of space primarily originates from the Big Bang, which occurred approximately 13.8 billion years ago. This energy is a remnant of the hot, dense state of the early universe and is now observed as the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) radiation. As the universe expanded and cooled, this radiation stretched and cooled to the microwave wavelengths we detect today. The CMB serves as a crucial piece of evidence for the Big Bang theory and provides insights into the early conditions of the universe.
No. Space is to all intents a vacuum, or very nearly so.
All of them except Space Shuttle Challenger
Gas is the state of matter that fills up all the space in its container. Gas particles are in constant motion and spread out to fill the available volume.
Water fills up all the pore space in the sediments.
other organs of the body get into that space
There is nothing that fills the space between neutrons and electrons. There may be a couple of other particles, but they do not come close to filling the space.
it's a gas - it fills all available space. A liquid will sit in a container.
They are non-matters as they do not have mass and do not occupy space like matters.
That is called the volume.
Gas diffuses in space.
Like all other forms of matter, air exists in space and time. It occupies the space-time continuum.
Nothing: a vacuum is the lack of matter.
Density (:
It is its volume