Suppose someone does a moon walk sans spacesuit. (As per another thread presently on page one of the forum.) Will that person feel hot or cold?
-Kris
Suppose someone does a moon walk sans spacesuit. (As per another thread presently on page one of the forum.) Will that person feel hot or cold?
-Kris
Space itself actually has no temperature but your body would lose all its own heat so it would feel really cold.
Unless the Sun is shining on you, in which case you’ll feel really hot.
Well, thespace suit has quite a cooling mechanism to control the temperature of the ventilation gas.
The cite also states that the sun side of the suit can reach 250 F and the space side -250F. Withouth the suit that would be quite a temperature gradient for the body to tolerate. However, if the ventilation gas needs cooling it would appear that the net heat from the sun and the body exceeds the heat lost to space.
The OP specifically asked about how it would feel without a suit.
Yes. I was just pointing out that a suit has to be cooled, and the suit is as white as they can make it so as to cut down solar input. Of course this also reduces radiation into space. A body clothed in white and exposed to the sun would probably be not too cold.
I’d wager it’d depend if you’re hot or cold. Vacuums are the best insulators.