A spacesuit can withstand extreme temperatures ranging from about -250°F (-157°C) to 250°F (121°C) in order to protect an astronaut in the vacuum of space. The suit's thermal control systems help regulate the temperature within safe limits for the astronaut inside.
A standard flight-rated NASA spacesuit costs about $12,000,000.
A Russian spacesuit, like the Orlan-MKS used on the International Space Station, can cost around $27 million to $30 million. This includes the research, development, and manufacturing costs for the specialized suit.
It gets hot and cold. Hot because there is no atmosphere so the sun's rays get in much easily. Cold because there is not atmosphere to trap the heat and don't forget the moon rotates so it still has day and night.
Mercury's temperature is so hot during the day because the atmosphere in Mercury is very thin, allowing a lot of heat to take in during the day and so cold at night because the atmoshere at night cannot hold the heat so it becomes extremly cold quickly. =) Thank you so much..... I hope I have the right answer
The "Surface" of Jupiter is hard to define as it is a gas giant but the top of the atmosphere (however you want ti define that) is cold due to heat radiating into space. Jupiter is so much farther from the Sun than Earth is, the Sun cannot heat Jupiter's atmosphere. And the heat form the interior (it is actually hotter than the surface of the Sun deep inside Jupiter!) dissipates into space.
Too much heat, too much cold and you can simply catch it from the people beside you.
Go in the cold
Border Collies are not very faund of the heat they much rather be in cold weather.
Cold-blooded animals do not produce much body heat. Most do not produce any at all.
Fuel is needed to heat homes. Cold environments, such as Montana and Colorado, are always cold and people need much more heat to constantly heat their homes.
Frogs protect themselves from too much cold or too much heat by their moist skin.
Sort of. In terms of physics, technically there is no such thing as cold. There is only heat, which is than measured on a scale to show how much heat is present. Heat will always transfer to something that has less heat than its present location. So technically no, cold does not absorb heat because cold is a perspective and not something that actually exists.. However, things that have less heat do absorb heat from things with more heat than itself. Cold is an abstract non physics word used to describe things with small amounts of heat, while in reality there is technically at least some measurable amount of heat if compared to true absolute 0 heat.
A standard flight-rated NASA spacesuit costs about $12,000,000.
It costs exactly one negro slave.
They protect themselves by their thick, moist skin.
They do not conduct as much heat as other door handles do.
Aluminized mylar and much more stuff. For more details check out nasa