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Astronomy & Space - December 2006

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

2006-12-17 01:22:06 · 9 answers · asked by rajeevan 1

2006-12-17 01:19:51 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-12-17 01:15:47 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-12-17 01:14:19 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous

Planets do not emit any kind light on their own. How are they then detected from out of our solar system? Is it also not possible that we could have missed out some planet in our own solar system itself?

2006-12-17 00:51:29 · 16 answers · asked by Akul Mehta 2

earth in our solar system has life, so it can be deduced that
planets having same kind of atmosphere harbour life. can
anybody confirm?

2006-12-17 00:49:39 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous

And if he does, what would his vision of an alien look like? Would it look like aliens in television, or simply a unicellular organism? Would they live in a different dimensional world, a 2D world perhaps? Would they live in a world composed of antimatter and make wondrous things out of their resources?

2006-12-17 00:24:08 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous

I mean are they there but we can only see them when it gets dark?

2006-12-16 22:29:00 · 14 answers · asked by KT 1

2006-12-16 22:22:16 · 2 answers · asked by al 1

Who believes that there are extraterestrial (spelling?) life on mars? Has there been any proof? What are some of the weird truth about mars?

2006-12-16 22:03:10 · 2 answers · asked by kkds14 3

2006-12-16 21:42:42 · 3 answers · asked by subha shree 2

2006-12-16 20:55:51 · 6 answers · asked by ? 2

Polar Ice is the 'standard'. Currently we are in a period of limited glaciation ( did i spell that right ? ). In theory they will be back big time !

2006-12-16 20:43:44 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous

i know no one can even get close to it cause it's scorching hot, but if there could be a space suit that can be worn that would not burn anyone (just pretend for a minute here), can the astronaut step on LAND on the sun or is it just hidrogen and helium and other such particles but it's not like land where you can step on it?

2006-12-16 17:25:58 · 28 answers · asked by chapped lips 5

i saw it take off this weekend at cape canaveral and i was imagining it will take off really fast. but when the engines roared, it started up very slow. what's up with that?

2006-12-16 17:23:04 · 8 answers · asked by chapped lips 5

they use so much fuel and it seems wasteful to me. it would be a lot easier if they took off at a similar angle than airplanes. then just get insane altitude and leave the atmosphere. just seems like they wouldn't have to use like 1000 gallons per second during take off and launch. i don't know. why don't we just make flying saucers lol.

2006-12-16 17:18:50 · 8 answers · asked by smokesha 3

sundog

2006-12-16 17:15:09 · 3 answers · asked by gery 1

yeah... :) wtf

2006-12-16 16:47:17 · 3 answers · asked by sophie 1

Is the Yahoo Answers community a fair representation of your human race here on earth? I really hope not for your sake. Where do I find the truly intelligent beings who are running the planet?

2006-12-16 16:36:06 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous

If you built a rocket with acceleration more than 9.8 m/s^2, it would eventually leave the earth, right? So where does the concept of escape velocity fit into this?

2006-12-16 16:05:11 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous

Orion's Belt is a constallation.

2006-12-16 15:47:09 · 7 answers · asked by Tot L 1

2006-12-16 15:19:01 · 10 answers · asked by benino6677 2

Which is the better brand? Or what is a good telescope for about $125 max.

2006-12-16 15:01:51 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-12-16 14:37:05 · 4 answers · asked by melissa s 1

I spoke with someone who's hobby is astronomy and he informed me that over a period of time-like 6 million years or so- that Saturn's rings will fall onto the planet due to Saturn's gravity. He told me the rings are too close to the planet and prevented a moon from forming or Saturn's gravity destroyed a moon. Either way he says the rings at some point will be a thing of the past. Is this true?

2006-12-16 13:59:29 · 4 answers · asked by Shelvey S 2

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