In case they're exposed to a vacuum
Yes. Not under their space suits, but in the pressurized space station and the crew decks of the Shuttle.
no, they are not real. They are practically C.P.E suits. C.P.E. suits can't be used like that because they are to hot and bulky to run around in.
Ermenegildo Zegna suits are very high end suits. On the official Zegna website, the suits cost anywhere from 2300 to 3000. There are other discount websites where one can find older fashions for cheaper.
They have heaters in the ships and space-suits.
yes
In case they're exposed to a vacuum
Of course, with properly pressurized suits and sealed, pressurized environmemts. There are no known planets where humans could live in the open as they do on earth.
They have to be in a pressurized capsule, and remove their helmets in order to eat. Alternatively, they could raise their face shield, but they would still need to be in a pressurized capsule.
They need air and an atmospheric pressurized environment.
Yes astronauts will have to wear their pressurized suits , when they walk in space.
Space shuttles are pressurized so that the oxygen stays inside the shuttle.
Because space is like a vacuum. If they went outside of their spacecraft without a pressurized suit, their bodies with stretch like putty.
To provide a pressurized environment and oxygen to keep the astronauts alive, as well as regulating temperature.
They have to where prussurized siuts because the gravity passed the atmosphere has gotten much more dense .
Yes. Not under their space suits, but in the pressurized space station and the crew decks of the Shuttle.
As there is no air out there they have to wear these preassigned suits to adjust to weightlessness and when they return the sudden change will cause problems.