no it vaporizes
When you go outside in outer space, you are unable to breathe. You would most likely pass out and your blood would then boil and finally freeze because of the vacuum of space.
In outer space, water exposed to the vacuum would rapidly boil and vaporize due to the lack of atmospheric pressure. The water would freeze quickly into ice crystals as it expands and loses heat energy. Ultimately, the water would dissipate into space as vapor or ice particles.
Your blood would immediately boil killing you instantly.
Yes, there is water in outer space in the form of ice and vapor. It can be found in comets, asteroids, and even in the atmospheres of some planets and moons.
Because there is "loads" of water in space - just widely distributed.
It doesn't. It lands on a runway.
No air. Sound is vibration is something- most commonly air, but sometimes water, metal, etc. There is no air in outer space to be vibrated.
water is similar to outer space because it has little gravity so astronomers use it to practice in it to get ready for outer space.
It doesn't...that's a myth. Blood doesn't boil in space.
No, you cannot see a rainbow in outer space because rainbows are formed by the refraction and reflection of light within water droplets in Earth's atmosphere. Outer space lacks the necessary conditions for rainbows to form.
outer (as in "outer space")
No. The lightening spreads a bit far and anything within that space would be killed, but the water shall not boil because the electric discharge is spread out so far.