Vacuum strips away the comforting lie that space kills by instant explosion or flash freezing. In reality, the danger is slower and more mechanical: once ambient pressure collapses, the fluids inside a human body start to boil, not from heat but from physics.
With external pressure near zero, the boiling point of water drops below normal body temperature, triggering ebullism in blood and tissue fluids. Circulatory pressure and homeostasis hold out for a few seconds, but dissolved gases come out of solution, capillaries distend, and gas embolism becomes a real threat long before true hypothermia. Oxygen partial pressure plunges, arterial saturation crashes, and cerebral hypoxia follows in moments while core temperature barely has time to shift.
Spacesuits answer this slow-motion failure by acting as personal life-support submarines for the void. Their primary task is not armor but controlled pressure: a sealed shell and gas-regulation system maintain a survivable internal atmosphere, keeping vapor pressure of body fluids below the boiling threshold. Integrated thermal regulation, using active heat-exchange loops and radiative control, manages conductive loss and solar gain. Closed-loop life-support handles oxygen supply, carbon dioxide scrubbing, and humidity control, while structural layers distribute mechanical stress so that joints can move without compromising cabin-equivalent pressure.