Yes, plants can grow in space, and experiments aboard the International Space Station (ISS) have demonstrated this. Astronauts have successfully cultivated various plant species, including lettuce and radishes, in microgravity conditions. These studies help scientists understand how plants adapt to different environments and are crucial for future long-duration space missions, where growing food could support human life.
Trees cannot grow in empty space since there are not resources needed for growth, such as soil and water.
cucumber
Currently, there are no farmers in outer space. However, there are experiments being conducted to grow plants in space for future long-duration missions. These experiments aim to provide fresh food for astronauts and understand how plants grow in microgravity.
True, Matter is anything that takes up space and has mass<3 However, physicists say that some particles of matter are massless, such as photons.
Anousheh Ansari did not lose anything in space. She made history as the first female private space tourist and the first person of Iranian descent to travel to space.
A Space to Grow was created in 1968.
They can grow in space if the space had fresh air.
Is anything that takes up space
Anything that occupies space, has mass.
Matter
Plants have been grown in space vehicles, but it is highly unlikely they can grow in space itself.
Yams cannot grow in space, infact nothing can because there is no air or heat. only things that can survive without water, food and heat can survive in space let alone grow ±¥±
Trees cannot grow in empty space since there are not resources needed for growth, such as soil and water.
Matter is anything having mass and occupying space (has volume).
NO
i dont think thay can grow because the plants need oxygen and there is not oxygen in outer space
Sunflowers need about 1 to 2 square feet of space to grow effectively.