In life-wise terms, no.
Outer space is outside the Earth, not anywhere on the surface of this planet.
I'm not exactly sure what you mean by outer planet... But it is a planet in outer space. Astronauts have been trying to see if there's been life on Mars. They've had space robots go up and take pictures. Hope I helped! =)
Yes, technically we are living in space since Earth is a planet that exists in outer space. Space is the vast expanse that exists beyond Earth's atmosphere, where celestial bodies like planets, stars, and galaxies are located. So, living on Earth means we are residing in the vastness of space.
Earth is called the "blue planet" because when viewed from space, the planet appears to be predominantly blue due to its abundant water bodies like oceans and seas. Water reflects sunlight and the Earth's atmosphere scatters sunlight in a way that makes the planet appear blue from outer 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".
To hold our planet, The Earth.
About 100 miles.
Yeah, eventually.
Astronauts have the thrill of looking down at earth from outer space. The earth is a planet.
Outer space is outside the Earth, not anywhere on the surface of this planet.
The planet Earth as seen from outer space is a blue and white ball.
Radiation is the primary method by which Earth loses energy to outer space. Specifically, the Earth emits longwave infrared radiation into space, which carries away excess heat and helps maintain the planet's energy balance.
Sally Ride, the first American woman in space, did not actually go to another planet. She orbited Earth aboard the space shuttle Challenger during her historic mission in 1983. Ride was a physicist and astronaut who made significant contributions to space exploration.
space
Yes, the Earth has been photographed from outer space by astronauts aboard spacecraft like the Apollo missions and the International Space Station. These photographs provide valuable scientific data and also offer unique perspectives of our planet.
The moon is the closest thing in outer space to the earth.
Yes, if you were talking about size and looking if they both have mountains. There is no planet exactly like earth, because other planets in space don't contain life or bodies of water.