The location of an object in space is referred to as its "position." This can be described using coordinates in a specific reference system, such as Cartesian coordinates, polar coordinates, or spherical coordinates. The position indicates the object's spatial relationship to other objects or reference points.
Trajectory
The location of an object in space is called its position. This can be described using coordinates such as latitude, longitude, and altitude in relation to a reference point.
An object in space that circles around another object is called a satellite. Satellites can be natural, such as moons orbiting planets, or artificial, like man-made spacecraft orbiting Earth.
A large space object which revolves around a star is called a planet. The word planet comes from the Greek word, "aster planets" which means "wandering star".
In space, when one object blocks the light from reaching another object, a shadow is cast. This effect is similar to shadows on Earth, but in the vacuum of space, shadows can be more defined, especially when the background is bright, like a star or a planet. These shadows can provide important information about the shapes and positions of objects in space.
It is called an eclipse.
The amount of space taken by an object is called its volume. This is the measure of how much three-dimensional space an object occupies.
Satellite.
The amount of space occupied by an object is called its VOLUME.
Trajectory
The space directly in front of a moving object is called the "leading space" in terms of composition.
The space taken up by an object is called volume.
satellite
an satellite
An object in 3-dimensional space is called a three-dimensional object or a 3D object. These objects have length, width, and height, making them appear solid and taking up space in all directions.
The location of an object is called its position. It describes where the object is situated in space relative to a reference point.
it is called a satellite it sounds wrong believe me i got it right in my science test yey