The gums will close up and there won't be a hole. And the hole can be "filled" up with an implant, a bridge, a partial denture or something called a flipper. It depends on which tooth is missing a other factors. Talk to your dentist to see what the best option for you is.
However, replacing an extracted tooth with a fixed bridge, a removable partial denture, or an implant to maintain the space and restore the chewing function is typically even more expensive.
dense
Empty space is a vacuum.
dense
You have (possibly) 4 options 1. do nothing, leave a space, and don't replace the teeth 2. possibly a "bridge" or a "fixed partial denture" (FPD) 3. possibly a "plate" or a removable partial denture (RPD) 4. possibly an implant(s) with a crown The answer depends on a variety of factors and will need to be discussed with your dentist. Not all options work in all circumstances.
In empty space, ie in a vacuum
yes most of the universe is empty space
Empty Spaces was created in 1979.
D: Empty space.
Yes, you can travel through empty space. The Sun, Earth, moon, satellites, space ships, atoms, and subatomic particles all travel through empty space. Greater than 99.999% of matter is empty space.
Ideally, you'd replace a diamond with another diamond. Or if you wanted the empty space to look like the diamond was still there, you could replace it with an imitation diamond. You can replace a diamond with almost any faceted stone.
Empty space.Empty space.Empty space.Empty space.