Time does not go quicker in space, but it can appear to be faster in certain circumstances due to time dilation effects predicted by the theory of general relativity. Near a massive object like a black hole, time can appear to pass more slowly compared to an observer in a different gravitational field, leading to the perception of faster time passage.
That depends: If you can go from one place to another without traversing the space in between then you can time-travel.
He went to the moon in the morning local time.
Sally Ride went to space for the second time on October 5, 1984, as a mission specialist on the space shuttle Challenger during mission STS-41-G.
Roberta Bondar flew aboard one space mission. She was the first Canadian woman to go to space, serving as a payload specialist on STS-42 aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery in 1992.
John Glenn went up into space for a second time on October 29, 1998, aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery. He became the oldest person to fly in space at the age of 77.
go and sex a girl
if your recovery time is quicker and your friend then your fitter than him the quicker the recovery time the fitter
there not gay and also they go to space for alot of reasons like research and allowing people to go up and mainly exploration they actually serv a grate purpose
You can't. What you can do is forget about checking the time and go on with your normal daily activities and the time will appear to pass quicker.
No, onion does not make it go off quicker.
she went to space in 1978
Could be time for a good tune up.
You get out of breath quicker because the air gets a lot thinner the higher you go. The highest point where there is no air at all is space.
Space goes on as far as there are celestial objects to occupy it. Space and time (to astronomers) are mutually dependent functions - they call it "space-time". Everything in the universe is moving away from everything else continually, and hence, space continues to grow/time continues to go on. A better question is: Will this expansion go on forever? Current view among astrophysicists is "yes".
the faster you go the slower will be the time According to Einstein, space and time are related, and thus referred to in the scientific community as space-time. The faster an object moves, the quicker time will appear to pass from the perspective of an observer. For example, if you could jump on a beam of light and travel for a year before jumping back off onto Earth, many years will have passed by for the rest of the world, whereas just the one year will have passed for you.
You get out of breath quicker because the air gets a lot thinner the higher you go. The highest point where there is no air at all is space.
yes