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3 answers

Not enuff info, but at 1.5 meters wide, no it will not be seen from space no matter how long it is, or if it goes (around)? the Earth

2006-07-25 08:54:29 · answer #1 · answered by battle-ax 6 · 0 0

If you could rewrite this in English, I might be able to give you an answer.

But I doubt if something covered with dirt (which is what I assume you mean) can be distinguished from a satellite -- unless it has an unusual footprint that would make analysts assume that it was man made. Despite claims that the only man made object that can be seen from space is the Great Wall of China, satellite images actually can see something that is 1.5 meters long.

I'm unsure how clamps would be able to steal water -- but if enough water is stolen, there might be better ways to detect it than by looking at satellite images.

2006-07-25 08:54:56 · answer #2 · answered by Ranto 7 · 0 0

The width of the the structure would matter more than the length, if you wanted to see it from space. As an example, many claim that the great wall of China can be seen from space, but this is false, because the wall is only 30 ft wide, and it wouldn't show very well from 60 miles above the Earth.

It would be like trying to spot a needle sitting on a rooftop of a building, while you were a mile away from it.

2006-07-25 09:11:04 · answer #3 · answered by djmasseeh21 3 · 0 0

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