Well, the space shuttle is no longer in space, it is in a museum, so if you hit a hockey puck off it, the hockey puck would probably crash into the museum wall.
In the absence of air resistance in space, both the feather and hammer would fall at the same rate and hit the ground at the same time, demonstrating Galileo's theory of falling objects.
No, kicking a bucket in space would not hurt since there is no gravity to cause it to hit anything. The bucket would continue to float in the same direction at a constant velocity.
It would spin out of earths orbit. And most likely hit a planet, star, comet, or keep on going.
the ball will go on forever unless it hit another object
Well, the space shuttle is no longer in space, it is in a museum, so if you hit a hockey puck off it, the hockey puck would probably crash into the museum wall.
No
Nothing at all. There is no such thing as a "space tornado". Tornadoes are whirling AIR masses, and there's no air in space. But if you are referering to a wormhole or a black hole then the Earth would probably get sent through the wormhole to the phonomenom's destination.
Nothing No One Can Hit A Planet
Same thing that would happen to you...
In the absence of air resistance in space, both the feather and hammer would fall at the same rate and hit the ground at the same time, demonstrating Galileo's theory of falling objects.
When the air runs out, you will suffocate. When the power in your spacesuit runs out, your body would freeze solid, and would remain that way essentially forever.
F it were in orbit. It would not stop until it was acted upon by another force. ie. it hits something, or another planets gravity.
the earth would be destroyed
The economy would take a tremendous hit.
If one hit they would be unprepared.
It would hurt.