It depends on how large the object is and where it lands. Haven't you seen disaster movies? A huge tidal wave it hits the ocean, massive explosion followed by a chilly nuclear winter, crazy flooding etc. etc. Maybe even the end of the world?
No, the weight of an object depends on the force of gravity acting on it, not its size or mass. For example, a large object in space where gravity is weaker would have a smaller weight compared to the same object on Earth.
To measure large distances in space, since light is used.
Yes. Momentum is based entirely upon mass and velocity, as shown by the equation p=mv, where p is momentum, m is mass, and v is velocity. Since an object can still have both mass and velocity in space, it can have momentum in space.
The amount of space taken by an object is called its volume. This is the measure of how much three-dimensional space an object occupies.
A super-elastic collision occurs when the kinetic energy after the collision is greater than the kinetic energy before the collision. An example is two perfectly elastic balls colliding in space with no external forces acting on them.
You've definitely got that right ! There's no debating the fact that the result of a collision is often an impact.
Not unless there are built inside each other it will cause a collision. No object in anyway, shape, or form can occupy another items space exactly.
Yes , because a large object takes up more space than a smaller object larger object has more space inside it. It will depend on if the ball is flat.
This is because the object is so large in size.
What is a large round object that movies around a star such as the sun
the large object spreads the water out more evenly over it's area because it's large while the small object has less space to do so.
No, the weight of an object depends on the force of gravity acting on it, not its size or mass. For example, a large object in space where gravity is weaker would have a smaller weight compared to the same object on Earth.
Hubble Space Telescope
The "big" bang theory is the theory that the earth was formed during a collision of space matter. The explosion/collision was so large that the particles in the middle generated life and formed the earth.
A large space object which revolves around a star is called a planet. The word planet comes from the Greek word, "aster planets" which means "wandering star".
Not with earth specifically, but it will eventually collide with the Milky Way Galaxy. Galaxies are mostly empty space, so when this collision occurs the chances of earth suffering a collision as a result are negligible.
It it is large enough to not completely burn up in the atmosphere it could fall from space and hit a car.