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11 answers

Solar wind isn't the same as wind on earth. On earth the wind we feel is the flow of our atmosphere - while the solar wind refers to the charged particles ejected from the sun out into space. Space is not a total vacuum in many places, but if you go really far away from a star there are likely large expanses of space that are very close to totally empty of any sort of matter.

2006-12-05 09:18:04 · answer #1 · answered by brooks b 4 · 1 0

Space is not a perfect vacuum, but it can get quite close in some places.

By comparison to most everyday experiences, space can be regarded as a vacuum. However, depending on where one is in 'space', the degree to which it is a vacuum can vary.

The sun (stars in general) 'blow' off tiny particles to make up the solar wind. There are also very tiny bits of matter floating around as well in the form of micrometeoriods and other types of space dust.
The nearer one is to a star or other celestial body, the more of this stuff there will be. The farther one goes out, the closer to a true vacuum space will become.

2006-12-05 08:49:25 · answer #2 · answered by mrjeffy321 7 · 1 1

There really isn't a relation because solar wind does not require a medium to flow through. (Like a wave passing through water, or wind through the air.) In fact, there probably wouldn't be solar winds if space wasn't a vaccum, because it would be absorbed by the matter between earth and the sun. You can think of solar wind like light. If there was a "curtain" of matter between us, it would be a dark place. Solar wind is energy particles that is pushed away from the sun due to thermal energy and magnetic fields on on the sun.

2006-12-05 09:00:00 · answer #3 · answered by Pecos 4 · 0 0

All of outer space is not a complete vacuum. Only intergalactic space (space between the galaxies) is very nearly a vacuum. The rest is filled with gas and dust. The average density of the entrire univers is less than 1 atom per cubic meter.

2006-12-05 14:57:53 · answer #4 · answered by ZeedoT 3 · 0 1

space is a big vacuum cleaner, it sucks a lot because there is not much there but with solar winds, it is a bunch of electro-magnetic particles that the vacuum cleaner cannot suck because it is very minute.

2006-12-05 08:47:57 · answer #5 · answered by radtadstar 2 · 0 1

Space is not a total vacuum. It is full of stuff! The stuff is just further apart than we experience here in the vicinity of Earth, so by comparison, it could be considered a relative 'vacuum'.

2006-12-05 08:45:04 · answer #6 · answered by Karen H 1 · 0 1

Ssolar winds are not real winds as we know them. They are electro magnetic "waves" emitted from the sun. They travel thru space as radiation from the flares and storms on ths sun surface. solar winds agitating our upper atmosphere is what gives us norhern and southern lights

2006-12-05 11:33:04 · answer #7 · answered by orion_1812@yahoo.com 6 · 1 0

solar winds are formed by the electro magnetic pull of the polls south to north. the vacuum of space is created by the pull of the sun which is gravity its self.

2006-12-05 08:57:24 · answer #8 · answered by Jess 1 · 0 2

Wind Vacuum

2017-01-14 07:54:16 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i change into very nearly to ask this question myself! From what we've been taught in college, there is not any wind in area, proper?? so a procedures as i understand, Soral Winds purely exist/are emitted my suns. So the astroid might want to might want to be sufficiently small to be stricken with the aid of that in our image voltaic gadget. yet then this brings the question, What if the astroid is vacationing at an unstopable speed?? at the same time as change into the terrific time you spoke of a rock be knocked away with the aid of image voltaic plasma? i imagine if we were to keep remote from the astroid, we would want to opt for to nuke the realm in the front of the astroid to knock it off its direction. If we get too close, the astroid might want to split and reason imminent doom with the aid of sending a lot of smaller astroids our way. So i'm guessing the answer to the astroid question might want to be that we are able to no longer smash the astroid without destroying ourselves. yet with the aid of keeping off its direction, we would want to have a danger at survival. wish this replied your question.

2016-11-23 18:39:50 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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