Yes, nukes(nuclear weapons) can travel up into space to destroy asteroids and huge flying rocks.
Yes but hard to destroy them. Nukes cannot be shot down if they are in space but they can be shot down in the earth.
Asteroids travel through space.
First you set up the laser beam house, get the nukes ready and than start launching it into space(starts firing at the asteroids). To save or protect the earth you must get ready. Set up all kinds of anti-asteroid weapons and fire at the huge flying rock(asteroid). Shoot lasers at the asteroid from the laser beam house, that will help protect the earth.
Asteroids travel through space in orbits around the Sun due to a combination of their initial velocity and the gravitational pull of the Sun. They can also be influenced by gravitational forces from other celestial bodies, such as planets, which can alter their trajectories. Ultimately, asteroids move through space following the laws of celestial mechanics.
Yes but not easy. But the truth is if nukes are already in space there is no way that missiles can stop nukes.
The average orbital speed is 17.882 km/s of asteroid in space
The cast of Nukes in Space - 1999 includes: William Shatner as Narrator
meteoroids
Stars are tremendously larger than asteroids and do not become asteroids.
Asteroids, meteoroids, and comets are space objects that are made of chunks of rock. Asteroids are rocky bodies that orbit the Sun within the asteroid belt, meteoroids are smaller rocky fragments that travel through space, and comets are a mixture of rock, dust, ice, and frozen gases.
Asteroids, astronauts, and auroras are examples of things in space that start with the letter "a."
Small bodies that travel through space are called asteroids, comets, or meteoroids. They can range in size from a few meters to several kilometers in diameter and are common in our solar system.