Well, you certainly can't go walking. You need to go in a specially designed spacecraft, one that costs millions of dollars to design, build, and send to outer space.
i really don't know actually to be honest
to take photographs of very distant galaxies, and show data of them to NASA. It is used, because there is too much light pollution in a lot of places on Earth, making it hard to use a telescope, but in space there is no light pollution (therefore, it can see the galaxies that we can't see on Earth).
A Telescope
In general no, but some borders (e.g. U.S.-Mexico) can be identified at night due to differences in lighting.
Plants are living organisms that grow into a wide variety of things, such as trees, flowers, grass, bushes, etc. Stars on the other hand are giant luminous balls of plasma that are in space, which you can see at night.
stars, planets, galaxies, darkness
No
We can see stars.
yes
One of your premises is incorrect. Stars are visible in outer space. Photographs in outer space sometimes do not show the stars due to other sources of light or the camera type, but you can actually see stars more easily because there is no atmosphere.
In outer space, you can see the Earth, as well as planets, moons, the sun, and other stars, without being hindered by the Earth's atmosphere. It is much clearer, and having the Hubble space telescope in Earth orbit allows it to see much more than any optical telescope could ever see on the Earth's surface.
Nope, the stars are just as big when you see them from space as when you see them from Earth.
because spacecrafts can see that the earth spins from outer space :)
There is no atmosphere in outer space to scatter light, so colors as we see them on Earth would not appear the same. However, objects in space still have intrinsic colors based on their composition and the way they reflect or emit light. Astronauts in space can still see these colors to some extent.
No, you cannot see a rainbow in outer space because rainbows are formed by the refraction and reflection of light within water droplets in Earth's atmosphere. Outer space lacks the necessary conditions for rainbows to form.
In outer space, you can easily see the Sun, and the stars; if you know where to look, the planets are also visible. The Earth and Moon, of course. If you are looking at the Earth, there isn't much that you can see other than lakes, oceans, mountains, Coastlines and clouds; LOTS of clouds. With the naked eye, there are no man-made objects that are visible from space. At night, however, you can easily see all of the lighted cities.
Google Earth apparrently can see a gnats whisker ! I'm thinking the only man made thing actually visible from outer space is the Great Wall of China, but I've yet to go into space.....