to stop the bad atmosphere of space getting in.
A space suit.
The inventor of the space suit was Zachery Hansen.
There is no best suit, it's all personal preference. For example, I use the Engineer Suit because you get more health when healed, but my friend likes to use the Vintage because it gives a discount on items at stores (I just switch suits to use it).
In space, it gives them air to breathe.
nasa__national American space accsiation
a Space Shuttle and a Space Suit
Gloves and boots are used for each and every mission in which astronauts are in space or on the moon. They are integral to any closed space suit. Without them astronauts would subjected to the vacuum of space and die almost instantly.
John Glenn looked like an astronaut in his space suit, which was white with the American flag on the shoulder. The suit had a helmet and gloves, and Glenn wore it during his historic spaceflight aboard Friendship 7 in 1962.
It's called a space suit
A space suit typically consists of a helmet, an upper torso garment (such as a pressure suit), gloves, lower torso coverings (such as pants), and boots. Each component is designed to provide protection against the harsh environment of space, including extreme temperature fluctuations, micrometeoroids, and lack of atmospheric pressure.
To the moon, you would wear a space suit that is specifically designed to protect you from the extreme conditions of space, including the lack of atmosphere, temperature fluctuations, and exposure to solar radiation. The suit would include a helmet, gloves, and boots to ensure your safety and ability to move and work in the moon's environment.
orange otherwise white space suit.
A space suit is a suit worn in space. This is necessary because of the vacuum and extreme conditions in outer space.
A suit, a rocket or brought oxygen maybe?
No, cotton is highly flammable
It depends if you want them and for what purpose. Does it suit you??? Buy them if they look good on you and if you are going to use them for a while.
The first space suits were designed by a team at the Berkley College of Engineering in 1934. They were intended for use in high-altitude flight, but laid the groundwork for later space suit designs used by astronauts.