He or she will see clouds, counturies and the oceans.
While his ship is accelerating away from the Earth he will feel heavier as acceleration acts a lot like gravity. Upon decelerating he will begin to feel lighter, a lot lighter, until he is almost weightless.
A space traveler leaving Earth in a spaceship would experience lower gravity the further they travel from Earth. This may cause physiological changes in their body such as muscle atrophy and bone density loss due to the reduced gravitational force. Additionally, they would need to contend with the challenges of long duration space travel such as isolation, radiation exposure, and the need for advanced life support systems.
The Moon is the nearest natural object to Earth in space.
To calculate weight in space, you would use the formula: Weight in space = Weight on Earth x (gravitational pull of space / gravitational pull of Earth). Since gravitational pull in space is typically much lower than on Earth (about 0.17 times that of Earth), your weight in space would be significantly less. Keep in mind this calculation assumes a constant gravitational pull throughout the region of space you are in.
Your mass would be 48kg both on Earth and in space as mass remains constant regardless of location. Weight, on the other hand, would vary depending on the gravitational pull of the celestial body you are on.
While his ship is accelerating away from the Earth he will feel heavier as acceleration acts a lot like gravity. Upon decelerating he will begin to feel lighter, a lot lighter, until he is almost weightless.
A space traveler leaving Earth in a spaceship would experience lower gravity the further they travel from Earth. This may cause physiological changes in their body such as muscle atrophy and bone density loss due to the reduced gravitational force. Additionally, they would need to contend with the challenges of long duration space travel such as isolation, radiation exposure, and the need for advanced life support systems.
The North Pole
It would really suck... for the people on the space station and the people on earth
The most common synonym would be cosmonaut, although space traveler and spaceflight participant are also used in English.
You would not see any of those numbers, lines, or marks on the Earth from space, since they are all imaginary. They're often printed or drawn on maps and globes, but they're not visible on the real surface of the Earth, any more than the national boundaries between countries are visible. This theory is confirmed in photographs taken by astronauts aboard the various space missions over the past 50 years.
im guessing its in space becasue t needs room and if it wasent in space the earth would just blow up
We are on the Earth's surface. To be in the Earth we would have to be underground. Although it doesn't look as if we are in space, the very thin blue sphere around Earth is our atmosphere. To enter space we would go through that atmosphere. :D
The Earth would start flying off into space.
Why would you want to take "nothing" from space when there is plenty of "nothing" right here on Earth.
we can see continents on earth
In space..