It is nonliving like all viruses and are not effected by sub zero temperatures.
This is not really a question that can be answered. People who have the virus normally get it from other infected people. Patient zero in most outbreaks has eaten or handled some meat that has been infected with the virus.
No, life would not survive on Saturn. Saturn has sub-zero temperatures, harmful gases, and it does not contain the necessities for life.
Probably a plethora of minerals, as well as some extremophile bacteria that can survive in the sub-zero temperatures.
Howdy! It is most likely that fruit bats are the natural reservoirs of ebola virus (EBOV) and infected non-human primates like monkeys. Eating non-human primates, and even bats, as bushmeat which is contaminated with the virus can prove to be very lethal for the victim. Hopefully, my response has helped you! 😄
Many species of cacti can survive a frost. Some can survive temperatures that are below zero for a time. However, there are species of cacti that are more tropical in nature and cannot tolerate freezing temperatures.
that the temperatures are below zero
Physics of low temperatures.
florida
you get Zero after defeating 4 investigaters and going to the area with the giant robot. you fight the Zero Virus and get Zero
Condensate is when temperatures are near absolute zero and the process causes atoms to begin to clump. When the temperatures gets colder and colder, the atoms aren't able to move.
No.
For temperatures, zero is an arbitrary reference point, depending on which scale is used. For Celsius, zero is assigned the the temperature at which water freezes. So temperatures which are colder than this temperature will be negative values, and temperatures warmer will be positive values. Fahrenheit uses a different reference point for zero, but similar principles apply.