It would desiccate (mummify), Note that there would be considerable variation depending on how it was "protected" (naked, space-suit, sealed casket).
They drop him off at the nearest space hospital. (In outer space). And pick him up on the way home if he isn't dead yet.
Yes and no. Skin is translucent. The very outer layer of skin cells can technically be determined dead, however you can see through them to the layers which are still growing. In addition the skin happens to be the largest organ in the human body.
They just keep floating around.
Nothing happens inside the dead body moments before "coming back to life" because a dead body cannot come back to life. Once a person is completely dead, they do not return to life as we know it.
Outer Space is cluttered and crowded because:competing satellites from different countriesjunk left over from dead satellitesjunk astronauts have 'dropped' while in space, example, tools
Outer Space is cluttered and crowded because:competing satellites from different countriesjunk left over from dead satellitesjunk astronauts have 'dropped' while in space, example, tools
no because the outer skin is dead and the inner skin is still alive and young. that is why when you scratch your skin, it turns white.
well i think what happens is that sometimes they die and they take your body when your dead and then it happens again and again its like a cycle
It decomposes and the chemical inside the body breaks the skin down into a smelly fragment
It is dead. It becomes a black dwarf, just a rock.
The study of death causes is called Pathology and the study of what happens to the dead body is usually called Anthropology.
In space, the lack of oxygen and extreme cold temperatures inhibit traditional decomposition processes. However, the body could become freeze-dried due to the vacuum of space, eventually breaking down into its basic elements over a very long period of time.