The Hindenburg was covered with a fabric made of cotton and linen, which was coated with a mixture of aluminum powder and varnish. This coating was designed to reflect sunlight and reduce the temperature of the gas cells, helping to maintain the airship's buoyancy. However, it was also flammable, contributing to the disaster when the Hindenburg caught fire while landing in 1937. The use of this material has been a subject of analysis in understanding the catastrophic failure of the airship.
the outside covering of fruit is called as pericarp
No, it's the outside of a mollusc, such as a snail, slug or squid. Arthropods are animals such as insects, crustaceans and arachnids, with a hard exoskeleton as their outside covering.
crust
Hull
Cell membrane
it does not have a cloth covering. on the outside it is a thin coat of plastic then leather.
exoskeleton
it was named after the late president of Germany, paul von Hindenburg
Hindenburg.
In most insects that would be an exoskeleton.
Its the cell covering, outside the cell
The Cell Wall