It depends on whether you are on the sunny or shady side and even then it is the surface itself that has a temperatuire since there is no air to collect heat and have a temperature itself.
2006-09-18 05:06:54
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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The ISS is in a fairly low orbit and travelling quite fast; something like twenty thousand miles per hour. The ISS circles the earth in less than 2 hours; half of that time it is in total darkness and very cold, the other half the time it is in direct sunlight and the spacecraft can get very hot.
2006-09-18 12:12:43
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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It depends. Since there is no atmosphere in space, it changes dramatically depending on the heat sources. It's about -250F to 250 F. If a body was thrown into space, the part facing the sun would burn away and the shady side would freeze into a block of ice.
2006-09-18 12:28:33
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answer #3
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answered by gregory_dittman 7
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20 degrees? Hadn't thought about that...
2006-09-18 11:59:40
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answer #4
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answered by luckistrike 6
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there is no temperature in space......its absolute zero....kidding
...actually, its cold as hell(elton john)..kidding again......space
is really really cold...lets put it this way, if you take a moonwalk, you dont want your spacesuit coming off...does that help?
2006-09-18 12:05:05
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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