This will depend heavily on the virus you are asking about - the influenza virus is relatively hardy while the HIV virus is destroyed pretty quick.
A virus that can survive to infect others through the air is called an airborne virus.
For a short period of time, HIV does survive on a needle in air.
No, eliminating the supply of oxygen from the air would not kill off a virus because viruses do not require or consume oxygen to survive. Viruses need a living host cell to replicate and cannot survive for long outside of a host organism.
The rubella virus is relatively fragile and does not survive long outside the human body. It can remain infectious on surfaces for a few hours but is typically inactivated within minutes when exposed to air and environmental conditions. Factors like temperature and humidity can influence its viability, but generally, it does not last long in the air.
few seconds
For a short period of time, HIV does survive on a needle in air.
Aids depends on the right conditions to survive. it will not survive for long outside a live host.
The influenza virus is destroyed by heat at 167o - 212o F (75o - 100o C). The length of time it could survive or if it could survive at 160o is debatable.
24 hours
HIV virus can not survive in hot water.
Yes, air plants can survive in a closed terrarium as long as they receive enough light and air circulation to thrive.
until your air runs out or forever