Space
in sentence
4234 examples of Space in a sentence
If we're going to get that, and make that gas station possible, we have to figure out ways to move large volumes of payload through
space.
We can do it because in
space
there are no aerodynamics.
We can build
space
tugs, orbiting platforms for holding cryogens and water.
You can dive into the stratosphere, and precisely dissipate that velocity, and come back out to the
space
station.
The traditional approach to
space
exploration has been that you carry all the fuel you need to get everybody back in case of an emergency.
There's a myth that you can't do anything in
space
for less than a trillion dollars and 20 years.
We're at a magical confluence where private wealth and imagination are driving the demand for access to
space.
The orbital refueling stations I've just described could create an entirely new industry and provide the final key for opening
space
to the general exploration.
Talk about
space
always seems to be hung on ambiguities of purpose and timing.
100 years after Sir Ernest Shackleton wrote these words, I intend to plant an industrial flag on the moon and complete the final piece that will open the
space
frontier, in our time, for all of us.
Let's first visit our planet, but at night, and from
space.
This is what our planet looks like from outer
space
at nighttime, if you were to take a satellite and travel around the planet.
And as a result, patent trolls can kind of live in the
space
in between.
It's a
space
that's more intuitive in which I present fragments of the story, beginnings of other stories, photographic evidence.
Okay, part one starts back in 1929 when the great astronomer Edwin Hubble realized that the distant galaxies were all rushing away from us, establishing that
space
itself is stretching, it's expanding.
That, much as the gravitational pull of the Earth slows the ascent of an apple tossed upward, the gravitational pull of each galaxy on every other must be slowing the expansion of
space.
How? Well according to Einstein's math, if
space
is uniformly filled with an invisible energy, sort of like a uniform, invisible mist, then the gravity generated by that mist would be repulsive, repulsive gravity, which is just what we need to explain the observations.
When the astronomers worked out how much of this dark energy must be infusing
space
to account for the cosmic speed up, look at what they found.
That is, we all know about the usual three dimensions of
space.
You see, when we speak of the Big Bang, we often have an image of a kind of cosmic explosion that created our universe and set
space
rushing outward.
It's called inflationary cosmology, which identified a particular kind of fuel that would naturally generate an outward rush of
space.
Because the theory predicts that the Big Bang would have been so intense that as
space
rapidly expanded, tiny quantum jitters from the micro world would have been stretched out to the macro world, yielding a distinctive fingerprint, a pattern of slightly hotter spots and slightly colder spots, across space, which powerful telescopes have now observed.
And if our universe got hit by another, that collision would generate an additional subtle pattern of temperature variations across
space
that we might one day be able to detect.
You see, we learned that our universe is not static, that
space
is expanding, that that expansion is speeding up and that there might be other universes all by carefully examining faint pinpoints of starlight coming to us from distant galaxies.
So astronomers in the far future looking out into deep
space
will see nothing but an endless stretch of static, inky, black stillness.
Surprisingly, the answer is empty
space.
Empty! Between the nucleus and the electrons, there are vast regions of empty
space.
Remember this vast region of empty
space
is inside the blueberry, which is inside the Earth, which really are the atoms in the grapefruit.
The atom is made up of vast regions of empty
space.
We conventionally divide
space
into private and public realms, and we know these legal distinctions very well because we've become experts at protecting our private property and private
space.
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