No. First of all it wouldn't stay on the ground. and why would you need to vacuum?
A vacuum cleaner depends on a difference in air pressure to operate. With no air pressure in space, there could be no difference in air pressure and thus no operation.
Inside a manned spacecraft, which is usually pressurized a vacuum cleaner will obviously work just fine; especially for collecting and disposing of water globules. Also the standard NASA space toilet uses a modification of a vacuum cleaner for urine collection.
Blackhole
A propeller needs a fluid in which to operate, like water or air. In space, there is not enough air for a propeller to work. Space is almost a complete vacuum.
Space is vacuum, and sound can't travel in vacuum.
2012
Energy from the sun travels through the vacuum of space by radiation.
a vacuum cleaner uses air to create suction. in a vacuum there is no air. Therefore, the aswer is NO.
how does vaccum work
The vacuum cleaner uses suction to pick things up off the ground
I seek the vacuum of space. Who'll vacuum the living room? That's a powerful vacuum cleaner.
because there was no space left in the aircraft...
Blackhole
Time= 1800
Vacuum Cleaner and Floor Polisher are both built with motor or machine that needs the power of electricity to work and function.
The filter in a vacuum cleaner separates dust from air. Air is allowed to pass through whereas dust is trapped by the filter and caught in the bag/cylinder of the vacuum cleaner.
That depends on the distance to the vacuum cleaner. The closer, the louder.
A Kenmore progressive vacuum cleaner is an up-to-date vacuum that is intelligent and easy to use. The vacuum has a feature called "inteliClean" that detects how much dirt is being removed from the floor or carpet.
Vacuum cleaner