Wikipedia |
Cited
The Moon
'Unfortunately, Earth’s moon has uninhabitable temperatures. The temperature ranges from -160°C to +120°C, and the surface pressure is around 3 x 10^-15 bar. The atmosphere is extremely thin, and is composed of Helium, Neon, and some other unusual gases, including sodium and potassium, which are not found in Earth’s atmosphere. Ebullism and lack of oxygen would inevitably kill you, so without a suit, a person could survive for about 3 minutes.'
This is not looking good for Saint Chucklins... Mennonite Chuck would become a Moonie.
Cool Cosmos
Cited
Suns
'The temperature at the surface of the Sun is about 10,000 Fahrenheit (5,600 Celsius). The temperature rises from the surface of the Sun inward towards the very hot center of the Sun where it reaches about 27,000,000 Fahrenheit (15,000,000 Celsius). The temperature of the Sun also rises from the surface outward into the Solar atmosphere. The uppermost layer of the Solar atmosphere, called the corona, reaches temperatures of millions of degrees. The corona is the bright halo of light that can be seen during a total Solar eclipse.'
Universe Today Deceomber 24 2015 by Fraser Cain
Cited
'These are stars with more than 100 times the mass of the Sun. One of the best known examples is Eta Carinae, located about 7,500 light-years from the Sun. Eta Carinae could be as large as 180 times the radius of the Sun, and its surface temperature is 36,000-40,000 Kelvin. Just for comparison, 40,000 Kelvin is about 72,000 degrees F. So it’s the blue hypergiants, like Eta Carinae, which are probably the hottest stars in the Universe.'
Chuck as one of the whitest men on this planet, would quickly become hot air.
Slate.com
Cited
Space
'At most, an astronaut without a suit would last about 15 seconds before losing consciousness (my fix) from lack of oxygen. (That's how long it would take the body to use up the oxygen left in the blood.) Of course, on Earth, you could hold your breath for several minutes without passing out. But that's not going to help in a vacuum. In fact, attempting to hold your breath is a sure way to a quick death. To make it for even a few seconds, Sunshine's Mace must have expelled the air from his lungs before he ventured into the starry void. If he hadn't, the vacuum would have caused that oxygen to expand and rupture his lung tissue, forcing fatal air bubbles into his blood vessels, and ultimately his heart and brain. Scuba divers are also at risk for air embolism; they're instructed not to hold their breath as they ascend from the deep sea.'
Chuck, this is not a libertarian, vacation, destination. The air has been taken out of the market. Hopefully, Chuck would get some space vacuuming done in the meantime. Be green Chuck, be green.
The Solar System
Courtesy and according to Facebook |