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2007-01-13 07:43:58 · 18 answers · asked by andrew 3 in Education & Reference Homework Help

18 answers

debris=pieces of asteroids, meteoroids, and planets that have broken off.

2007-01-13 07:46:59 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Beware, some day us humans will gather up all of the litter and garbage into one giant ball of garbage, and hurl this world sized garbage ball straight into space. because of how we are, we will not worry about any repercussions.

a few hundred years later this giant ball of refuse will come spinning dangerously back at us in a course that will simply and utterly demolish our entire planet.

tuff luck, their problem.

in peril, whomever inhabits this doomed ball of dust will have no choice but to create another giant ball of human waste and hurl it toward the object of their impending doom.

Another hundreds of years later a ball twice the size will be on a course of revenge of its creator. Obviously at this time there will not be enough half eaten Hershey bars, and mostly empty pizza boxes left to save the planet from its inherited doom.

The end of the world will not come from a nuclear holocaust, or the soler system being sucked into the black hole created when the sun implodes. The end will not even come when the nerds ban together and create the ultimate robot army with an artificial intelligence that will take over and rid the planet of any living life.

The end of this world will come,,, from the little bit of litter that you currently speak of!

2007-01-13 17:03:17 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

yes, one example is the last mission that was sent out into space. The astrounauts were hitting golf balls into the open space. This is definately littering. And as soon as governments can figure out how to get our garbage out there...oh I am sure will be sending up shuttles full of debris

2007-01-13 15:47:59 · answer #3 · answered by k8thesnake 3 · 0 0

I guess it is a possibility.....but it's hard to tell....there is not going to be litter in space like there is on the earth...but since space has been visited by us and we have walked on the moon and such it is always a possibility that we dropped something and it is floating around up there....but I dunno....I would ask a scientist.

2007-01-13 15:47:13 · answer #4 · answered by Just Wondering 5 · 0 0

I don't know about "in space" but there are abandoned manmade objects that humans have left on other planets and moons, such as our own moon, Mars, and Venus. This includes rovers and landing capsules from as far back as the 1960s. See the link below for a list of such objects on the surface of the Moon. There are over 170,000 kg of manmade stuff on the Moon alone.

2007-01-13 16:43:30 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Absolutely. We launch things into space and different kinds of debris are cast off. With no gravity up there, it just floats around. The space station probably jettisons waste and garbage all the time, unless they stow it somewhere for a crew to return it to Earth for disposal.

2007-01-13 15:49:12 · answer #6 · answered by Darby 7 · 0 0

I know there is. There are thousands of pieces of space junk from expended rocket boosters to lost space gloves to tools to screws, etc. All kinds of things that have accumulated over the past 50 years. All of these items are tracked by NORAD because if the smallest of them hits a manned space craft it can be a disaster.

2007-01-13 15:49:30 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes, are old forgotten space probes are still in space. That could be considered litter.

2007-01-13 15:46:39 · answer #8 · answered by alias_dictus_tony 6 · 1 0

Space Junk. It's everywhere

2007-01-13 15:46:48 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes
I believe there are many Mars bars wrappers floating around.
Also some Milky bar wrappers floating up to the milky way.

hopr this helps

kind regards

2007-01-13 15:47:48 · answer #10 · answered by Police Artist 3 · 0 0

Sure. We have computers that track tens of thousands of peices of junk and rocks around the earth. It is all taken into consideration for orbiting missions. Eventually the stuff is drawn into our atmosphere and burns up during reentry.

2007-01-13 15:46:06 · answer #11 · answered by Dorothy and Toto 5 · 1 0

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