A sphere in outer space is a three-dimensional object with symmetrical and curved surfaces, resembling a ball or a planet. It can occur naturally, such as celestial bodies like planets, stars, or asteroids, or it can be man-made, like a spacecraft or a satellite. Spheres in outer space follow the principles of physics and gravity that influence their movement and interactions with other objects.
No.
That depends on what you mean by "outer space". The moon is outside the Earth's atmosphere and therfore "in space" but it is orbiting the Earth and therfore hardly "outer".
They Came from Outer Space was created on 1990-10-01.
Flying Saucers from Outer Space was created in 1953.
No, they are properties of matter. Outer space has the properties it has because it has little to no matter.
The Earth's outermost sphere is the Lithosphere. It's the rigid outermost shell of the Earth.
Space was innitialy sphere.
the middle sphere is between the asthenosphere and the outer core!
Charges on a hollow sphere reside on the outer surface due to mutual repulsion and electrostatic equilibrium. The electric field inside a hollow sphere is zero.
The earth isn't perfectly spherical... It is slightly elliptic due to the gravitational pulls and it's rotational axes, but otherwise it is known that the shape of the earth is a sphere by photographs and measurements of the planet from outer space.
outer (as in "outer space")
they built it in outer space
There is no antonym for outer space.
outer (as in "outer space")
Speed of light is possible within a sphere.whereas controlled properties of the sphere can be introduced with technoligy in the year 2027.
a sphere
In Outer Space was created in 1983.