Sound is the vibration of matter and since there is no matter in space it can't transmit the vibrations.
However, if hypothetically the sound could travel through space it would reach earth in 137,000 hours, unfortunately, the light of the explosion would reach earth in about 8.5 min that is not applying Newton's law of instantaneous forces, which says that the earth would instantly be released from orbit before anything at all reached earth and this release from orbit would delay the time the light reached earth. then the actual explosion (explosive energy and matter) would reach earth in about 22 hours. so all life would be dead and the planet will have been vaporized 15 years before any "sound" reached earth.
Light travels in vacuum but sound cannot. So, we can see solar flares but can't hear them. (Outer space can be considered to be vacuum)
Any kind of collision, such as a meteorite or asteroid colliding with a planet, or an explosion of a star could be classed as natural disasters in space.
That depends on what you mean by "outer space". The moon is outside the Earth's atmosphere and therfore "in space" but it is orbiting the Earth and therfore hardly "outer".
They Came from Outer Space was created on 1990-10-01.
Flying Saucers from Outer Space was created in 1953.
no sally ride did not die in the challenger explosion. but she did investigate on the explosion.
Light travels in vacuum but sound cannot. So, we can see solar flares but can't hear them. (Outer space can be considered to be vacuum)
No, sound cannot travel in the vacuum of outer space because it requires a medium, such as air, to propagate. Explosions in space can still release energy in the form of light and radiation, but they would not produce any sound.
Any kind of collision, such as a meteorite or asteroid colliding with a planet, or an explosion of a star could be classed as natural disasters in space.
Space Racers - 2014 Drifting was released on: USA: 2 May 2014
In space, nobody can hear you scream, but it doesn't mean there's no sounds up there. Black holes generate sound. There's always one nearby.
The two Voyager space probes are robotic spacecraft launched in 1977 as the first spacecraft to examine the outer planets. Both are still operating, having passed the orbits of the outer planets, and drifting toward the boundary of the solar system.
Yes - IF debris strike the nearby object ... including gasses. The force (on Earth) from compressing the atmosphere is missing.
outer (as in "outer space")
There is no antonym for outer space.
outer (as in "outer space")
they built it in outer space