A typical butane cigarette lighter would produce a flame in a low-gravity space ship. It would not produce a flame in the vacuum of space.
You would be lighter in space because weight is the result of gravity pulling on your mass. In the absence of gravity in space, you would not experience the same force pulling you down, making you feel weightless.
40 percent
In the moon's lower gravity, you would feel lighter and be able to jump higher. However, you wouldn't float as if you were in space because there is still some gravity on the moon. To stay in place, you would need to exert less force compared to on Earth.
it would shape like a penis
I have known that it will not work in space while you are in the space shuttle. But it is a good thing that it works on earth but the bad thing is that it doesn't work in space. Answered by:SAV
If you just mean the actual lighter part itself( the part that pops out when hot),almost any vehicle lighter would work.
If you can charge a cellphone in the lighter socket, then the lighter is no good. If a cellphone won't charge, then the lighter cylinder is no good. Both are available at any autoparts store.
No, kites need both wind and gravity to work.. and neither of those are in space.
Check the fuse.
Yes, a lighter can explode in outer space. This is because the flammable material inside the lighter can combust if it comes into contact with a source of ignition, such as a spark or flame, even in the absence of oxygen.
There is no oxygen in space and fire needs oxygen.
The opposite word of space is crowded. Or even cramped would work.