No
No, it does not rain in outer space because there is no atmosphere to support weather patterns like rain. Rain requires water vapor, condensation, and gravity to fall to the ground, which are not present in the vacuum of space.
When the shuttle is taking off, it burns enormous amounts of hydrogen with an oxidiser. The sole product of this reaction is water. However, this water cannot stay in the air, as the air is then supersaturated (like stormclouds). So the excess falls to Earth, in the form of rain. other than that the government is evil
first one ever launched was Spunik by the Russians
No, Michael McKay has not traveled to space. He is a historian and not an astronaut.
Six were made, but only five ever went into space.
Earl O. Peterlick, a famous astronomer of the Austrian university of Shlekenbourg, discovered that it rained frequently in Austria, but does not rain in space, hell, or under the ocean. Rain doesn't fall in space...ever.
Not in outer space; but it does rain on Earth and Earth is in space so in a sense it does.
Yes, on earth. There is no rain in space.
No, it does not rain in outer space because there is no atmosphere to support weather patterns like rain. Rain requires water vapor, condensation, and gravity to fall to the ground, which are not present in the vacuum of space.
Yes. The largest 'objects' that exist are unimaginably huge clouds of material in space.
Have You Ever Seen the Rain - album - was created in 1975-07.
everywhere in space. absolutely everywhere.
Rain forests have between 98 and 177 inches of rain annually.
A storm with no rain
It can rain at any time of the day or night.
No it cannot and will not.
hell naw