A satellite map shows if its gonna rain or something like that
by the russians. it was a hollowed out nuclear missile =============================== No, and furthermore, no. Sputnik was the name given to the first man-made object to successfully achieve low-earth-orbit, after earlier failed attempts in both the USA and the USSR. It was not the first intended artificial satellite to be launched, only the first to succeed. And it didn't go anywhere near "outer space", just into thin-enough atmosphere that it was able to stay there for a few months before it fell out of orbit and burned up.
If memory serves - this was a lot of years ago - the Echo satellite(s) were launched in 1960. They were enormous "beach balls" that inflated in space after launch, and the outer skin was a shiny Mylar-type material. They were mainly an experiment in communications - bouncing signals from one place to another, and they had a planned finite life before they descended and burned in the upper atmosphere. The great-grandfathers of today's communication satellites. I will not swear to the year above, but I am almost certain it was 1960-61
If we did not live on the outer layer of the Earth also known as the crust we would burn to death because it is so hot down below because the core of the Earth is so hot
the outer core is considered a liquid
they built it in outer space
The suit allows the person to walk in outer space, because the suit is designed to with stand the extreme heat and cold of outer space.
no
to protect the microchips and other technology in the satellite
A "live satellite" is something that is being shown "live" from a satellite, such as images from space, or views of the Earth from a satellite in outer space. TV programs you watch on satellite is not considered "live satellite".
The first thing sent into outer space was a satellite
The moon is not classified as a planet at all. It is a natural satellite of Earth.
skin
America first launched into outer space on January 31, 1958, with the launch of Explorer 1, the first satellite launched by the United States.
By a satellite in outer space
Strategic Defense Initiative.
The machine that takes pictures from outer space is called a satellite or a satellite imaging system. These satellites orbit the Earth and capture images of the planet's surface using cameras and sensors.