English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Astronomy & Space - June 2006

[Selected]: All categories Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

2006-06-17 16:39:20 · 5 answers · asked by supurdna 2

Then where did that come from? Then where did that come from?

2006-06-17 16:28:36 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous

stars

2006-06-17 15:43:12 · 15 answers · asked by Olga M 1

2006-06-17 14:46:18 · 13 answers · asked by wjalltheway2004 1

2006-06-17 13:48:44 · 3 answers · asked by shadyjd 1

How come the Earths orbit has not been effected by the expansion of the universe? Or has it?

2006-06-17 13:48:31 · 14 answers · asked by Ballzy 6

2006-06-17 13:43:23 · 5 answers · asked by michael_ 1

life somehow eventually developed here on earth under the "circumstances". wouldn't it be just as likely and as possible for it to develop elsewhere, under different circumstances? just because we need water and other elements such as oxygen here on earth in order to survive, does that neccessarily mean that life forms that may exist on other planets or moons in other parts of the universe need the same elements in order to thrive, or are we being arrogant in assuming that life forms elsewhere must be just like we are here on earth?

2006-06-17 11:44:56 · 15 answers · asked by Friedrich v. Schiller 2

Example: Why does our sun remain where it is ..why does it not fall towards the star below it ...and I am sure we have stars and celestial bodies all around .how do they keep themselves stable in space.

2006-06-17 11:35:05 · 7 answers · asked by desiguyinatlanta 2

Is it possible for an object to move faster than the speed of light? If so, then if a large explosion in space were to launch a meteor on a path towards earth -- moving faster than the speed of light -- wouldn't it impact earth before our telescopes could detect it?

2006-06-17 11:27:03 · 16 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-06-17 10:58:31 · 16 answers · asked by kamchak 1

You always hear about the catastrophic results of an asteroid impacting the Earth, but what if it hit the moon? Would the moon break into pieces and form a ring around Earth, like Saturn's rings? Or, if its orbit changed, what would happen to our tides? Our weather?

2006-06-17 10:44:05 · 6 answers · asked by Lord Tyrant 3

2006-06-17 10:36:58 · 26 answers · asked by royalannh 1

I'm trying to get a list of people that you would need to go on a fictional space exploration project.

2006-06-17 09:57:58 · 15 answers · asked by fresnoca2002 1

2006-06-17 08:17:33 · 16 answers · asked by Poopster 1

2006-06-17 08:09:21 · 9 answers · asked by jc 2

If say two comets, asteriods, or meteroites were to collide would they just smash each other apart or could this cause them to change paths?

2006-06-17 07:54:13 · 9 answers · asked by butterflykisses427 5

2006-06-17 06:50:39 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous

I have several if not all of the space appalo news clippings and was wondering if they are worth holding on to? would some one buy old stuff like that?

2006-06-17 06:43:01 · 7 answers · asked by nanawebster 1

Gravitational pull of a black hole must have limits, but acts like a whirlpool. If the colllapse of the planet, pulls in more matter than the planet itself, what exponential of matter can it hold?

2006-06-17 05:34:36 · 8 answers · asked by 52HotRod 1

And furthermore, with enough research, could we actually prove that history WILL repeat itself, and when?

2006-06-17 05:33:07 · 13 answers · asked by honeybunchesofdeath 2

2006-06-17 05:16:30 · 15 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-06-17 05:13:52 · 18 answers · asked by vfmeyer77 1

2006-06-17 04:00:01 · 7 answers · asked by Cathe M 1

2006-06-17 03:19:52 · 19 answers · asked by BigDaddy 2

fedest.com, questions and answers