There's plenty of water in space, mostly in the form of chunks of ice or very rarified gas.
Most of the water in the human body is located within the intracellular space, which is the fluid found inside the cells. Approximately two-thirds of the body's total water content is contained in this space. The remaining water is distributed in the extracellular space, which includes interstitial fluid and blood plasma.
Water on earth is never lost in space; vapors are condensed and transformed in rains and snow.
The demand by organism on its environmental resources such as space food and water are vocabulary. This is taught in 5th grade.
water
The correlation between the volume of water poured into a container and the amount of empty space left in the container is inversely proportional. As the volume of water increases, the empty space decreases, assuming the container is filled to its capacity. When the container is full, there is no empty space left. This relationship illustrates the principle of volume conservation within a defined space.
There is not water in space!
send an astronaut with a bottle of water and open it in space
No, in actual space there isn't. Astronauts bring water with them.
space
Yes, water does take up space. It has mass and volume, which means it occupies a certain amount of space depending on the quantity of water present.
there is water in space
Yes. Water occupies space. If you don't believe try out an experiment where you put water in a syringe and try to push it.
No .
No - just space. The space has no pockets.
They will have to recycle the water.
The water will expand on freezing, so taking up more space.
Bring it in a special water bottle