No. HIV needs a host. It does not live long, outside the body.
few seconds
Aids depends on the right conditions to survive. it will not survive for long outside a live host.
HIV can survive for a very short time outside the body, typically only a few minutes to hours. Factors such as temperature, humidity, and quantity of virus can impact its ability to survive. It is important to note that HIV is not easily transmitted through environmental surfaces.
Yes.
HIV will only survive in water for a matter of minutes - even less in chlorinated water - but it will in any case be so diluted as to be harmless.
No. Â AIDS is something everyone worries about, but it is not a tough virus. Â It lives at normal body temperature and the virus dies very quickly when it is outside the body. It is almost impossible to get AIDS like that. Â The virus just won't survive long enough on a pad wrapper to infect you. Â
HIV virus can not survive in hot water.
It would be nearly impossible to get a cold sore from a telephone as the virus can't survive long outside of the body.
No
Rabies virus is very delicate virus. It is inactivated by desiccation and ultra-violate light. It is easily killed by high temperature, say 70 degree Celsius.
HIV will not survive long outside the body; in most cases if the blood is completely dry, the virus is dead.
Scientific studies have found that HIV can sometimes survive in dried blood at room temperature for up to six days. Other sources claim that if the virus cools to "room temperature" it will become inactive. Another source states: The Human Immunodeficiency Virus is fragile. (...) Even in a wet state, it does not live long when exposed to heat, detergents, or disinfectants. When stored in blood banks at 4°C, it can live for about 3 weeks (or longer), or till the white cells disintegrates, but in a frozen state it can survive for years.