Outer space is an extremely hostile place. If you were to step outside a spacecraft, such as the International Space Station,or on a world with little or no atmosphere such as the moon or Mars without the protection of a space suit,, then the following things would happen:
Space exposure ---- Take a look at this, very interesting information.
Answer by: rgc831@gmail.com ... I am not Nmacholl, I just don't know how to edit his name out.
The furthest humans have traveled in space (away from the earth) is to the moon
and around its far side. But there have been a number of people that have spent a
long time in space going round the Earth. Look in the link I will place below for more
detailed information.
Just for comparison, that farthest trip into space by a human is about 0.0095 of the
distance to the nearest planet (Venus), and about 0.0026 of the distance to the sun.
The farthest distance from the Earth that any human beings have been propelled
was scored by the Apollo astronauts who orbited the moon, putting them roughly
2,200 miles farther from us than those who merely landed on the moon's nearer
side ... a total of maybe 241,000 miles from Earth, or about 1/4 of one percent
of the distance to the sun, and about 7/10 of one percent of the shortest distance
between the Earth and Mars at any time during the past 5,000 years, and almost ...
not quite but almost ... one whole percent of the closest that Venus ever is to Earth.
Really moving on out there, into the trackless void where no man has gone before !
90 percent of the work of space travel is getting into space to begin with; once you're there, there are few limits to how far you can go. The biggest obstacle is taking your cozy Earth environment - your life support system - with you, and keeping it working.
Make that environment large enough, and it can take care of itself without much technology. That would require a fairly large habitat, with plants to provide oxygen and remove the CO2, and to provide food and recycle wastes. But it works here on Earth; it will work there as well.
Very quickly.
Eventually...
Your eyes and mouth would get frosty right away though. The temperature in space is near absolute zero, however there isn't anything to transfer your heat away.
That answer would work if the question were: "how quickly would you freeze if you rolled around butt-naked on the moon?"
The farthest any human has traveled into space is actually unknown, because a Russian cosmonaut was lost in space . The furthest record has been the Apollo 13 mission from the American astronauts when they flew around the moon and back. Human kind has made machines that travel to different planets for us though, like the mars rovers.
No one actually knows. We can't even estimate how much "space" there is up there in the universe.
How long do you think anyone can survive without air?
if is constantly on 8 hours if u mean as till it burns up 12 mabey 13 hours
The furthest humans have travelled in space is a little past the moon but they were in the moon's gravitational pull. The furthest that humans have landed is on the moon.
It orbits at 569 km above Earth.
Approximately 170,221,694,400,000 miles !
As of April 5, 2010, a total of 517 humans from 38 countries.
Most Space Probes never come back, the Space Probe Voyager 1 has traveled so far that it is out of our solar system. It was launched in the 1970s.
A Space Shuttle has never taken a human to the moon.
The moon is the farthest a man has traveled. Mars is planned for 2018.
Humans have orbited the moon. When they were around the "back", they were about 240,000 miles from the earth. That's the record so far.
Not yet. The New Horizons space probe, launched in 2006, will fly by Pluto in June 2015. Humans themselves have only been as far as the moon.
It orbits at 569 km above Earth.
Approximately 170,221,694,400,000 miles !
I don't know all three, but heres one: chimps.
As of April 5, 2010, a total of 517 humans from 38 countries.
No, only land rovers have traveled to Mars. Humans do not yet have a sophisticated enough space craft, and it would be so far impossible to hold enough supplies for the trip back and forth.
Most Space Probes never come back, the Space Probe Voyager 1 has traveled so far that it is out of our solar system. It was launched in the 1970s.
When the Apollo astronauts were in orbit around the moon they were the furthest any human had been from the earth.
Humans
There is no active galaxy that is effective in the intergalactic space probes. No space probe has ever traveled as far as the next nearest star outside of our solar system.