Red.
Red.
In space, your blood is still red. The lack of gravity does not change the color of your blood. However, in a weightless environment, blood may behave differently due to changes in circulation.
i would like to know all information on animal bats. Their blood color and why it has that color?
red
Their color would be perceived as different because sunlight in space is not filtered through the bluish sky like it is on Earth.
as the fly's blood lacks hemoglobin as well as rbc.
All vertebrate animals have blood with hemoglobin, an compound that is used to carry oxygen in the blood. Hemoglobin is what gives blood a red color. Dinosaurs would have also had hemoglobin, and hence, red blood.
Red, as it appears from Earth.
No. The primary cause of the red color we associate with arterial blood is caused by the color of hemoglobin in its oxygen bound state. If I may speculate as to what color blood would be without hemoglobin, I would guess probably a rather light brown. I am basing that speculation on the the fact that serum (the cell-free, liquid component of blood) is a light brown color and that most cells are white-grey in color.
Since blood is already liquid the particles would just mix together. Technically that would be dissolving.
It would be gray and torn and the red would come in because of the blood
It can thin slightly in hotter temperatures and conversely thicken in colder temperatures. Blood is red and there may be very slight differences in colour in these cases but it would not be really noticeable.