yes easily if it got that far because the artoird belt is not like what you see in the movies.
Each astorid is like a million miles apart so you could plot a random course and almost be sure that it wouldn't hit anything
hope this helps
The second satellite to be sent into Earth orbit was "Sputnik 2".
The first president to have an asteroid named after him was George Washington. The asteroid "318" was named after him in 1890.
No, the first man-made satellite was launched in 1957 by the then Soviet Union: The Sputnik-1 satellite.Natural satellites of courses existed since the creation of our solar system. For example, our moon can also be called a satellite of earth, but you are probably asking about man-made satellites?
Sputnik is artificial; it was the first human-made satellite launched into space by the Soviet Union on October 4, 1957. Made of metal and equipped with radio transmitters, it marked the beginning of the space age and the start of satellite technology. Its launch not only demonstrated technological advancement but also had significant geopolitical implications during the Cold War.
Ceres.
pagal
Russia
Russia (U.S.S.R.) had the sputnik
over a thousand artificial satellites. the first artificial satellite was sputnik. the only natural satellite earth has is the moon
Sputnik was the first artificial satellite.
The USSR launched the first artificial satellite, Sputnik, launched i October 4 1957.
The only artificial satellite launch to take place in 1975 was in India. This satellite was called Aryabhata. Sputnik was the very first artificial satellite to be released, it took place on October 3, 1957.
arayabatta
China launched its first artificial satellite on October 24, 1970. The satellite was named Dong Fang Hong 1 (DFH-1).
The first artificial satellite was "Sputnik", launched into orbit by the Soviet Union.
The first artificial satellite in space was called the Sputnik. The Sputnik satellite was launched on the 4th of October, 1957. It belonged to the Soviet Union.
The first artificial satellite, Sputnik 1, was launched on October 4, 1957 by the Soviet Union.