No problem ! Outer space is already a vacuum ... full of it ! I used to read that space is a better vacuum than any vacuum that can be produced in a laboratory on earth. Maybe that's not true any more. Bu the fact remains: Space is a pretty good vacuum. Open a pickle jar in outer space, wait 30 seconds, shake it around a couple times, then screw the cover back on, tight. When you get back, you'll have a jar full of the best vacuum any of your friends have ever seen. (Hard to prove, though.)
the vacuum of space
outer space is a vacuum and a vacuum is completely empty space. however all celestial bodies that exist in space(planets, stars, etc.) do not make up space
No.
A Vacuum
There is no true vacuum in outer space (or anywhere!). Very very roughly, if something 'froze' in outer space, the 'energy' would convert into 'frozen matter'.
Examples of vacuums include the vacuum inside a sealed jar, the vacuum of outer space, and the vacuum inside a vacuum cleaner.
Because space is a vacuum.
A space suit is a suit worn in space. This is necessary because of the vacuum and extreme conditions in outer space.
I could survive in outer space without a space suit, as long as I was inside a space ship, or space station. I cannot breathe vacuum.
Light travels in vacuum but sound cannot. So, we can see solar flares but can't hear them. (Outer space can be considered to be vacuum)
Only in a total vacuum. Even in outer space there are traces of gas.
No, a gasoline engine cannot operate in outer space because it requires oxygen to combust the fuel. In the vacuum of space, there is no air for combustion to occur, so the engine would not work.