Your blood would immediately boil killing you instantly.
No, the heat on the Moon is not sufficient to boil human blood instantly. The average temperature on the Moon ranges from about 100°C during the day to -173°C at night, which is not enough to boil human blood.
When you go outside in outer space, you are unable to breathe. You would most likely pass out and your blood would then boil and finally freeze because of the vacuum of space.
It is possible to travel into space without a space suit, but if the capsule lost pressure, the astronauts blood would boil and they would be dead in about a minute.
Extremely hot, but would feel cold if you were exposed, you would then die a sudden painful death as your blood and body suddenly boil.
There is no atomosphere or atmospheric pressure. Without atomspheric pressure the astronauts blood would boil.
no it vaporizes
No, people cannot breathe in space without a helmet. Space is a vacuum, so there is no air to breathe. Without a helmet, there would be no protection from the vacuum of space, causing a person's blood to boil and ultimately leading to unconsciousness and death.
Because blood is liquid, its boiling point is affected by pressure changes. Extremely low pressure would lower the boiling point enough that the blood would boil at a temperature less than body temperature.
They would quickly die of asphyxiation due to the lack of air and the astronauts blood would boil because there is very little pressure in space so this would lower the boiling point of your blood causing it to boil quicker at a lower temperature this would also contribute to killing the astronaut.
so you could breathe cause if u didnt u would die but u would also kneed a space siut so ur blood dosent boil or other stuff
No, blood does not boil in the human body. The normal body temperature is around 98.6°F, which is below the boiling point of blood. If blood were to reach the boiling point, it would result in serious tissue damage and likely death.