The corpse would freeze slowly due to the insulating effect of the vacuum (a vacuum is a fine insulator, this is why a partial vacuum is used in the lining of a thermos bottle). Internal anaerobic bacteria would almost immediately start decomposing the body after death at least until all the surrounding tissue had frozen. If the body wasn't a great deal farther from the sun than the Earth is then sunlight would have a significant effect as well. If the body had very little rotation, the entire corpse might freeze starting at the dark side but the sunlit side would bake and sublimate almost all moisture giving a nice freeze dried effect. If the corpse had a good rotation rate freezing might not ever occur but baking and drying out certainly would given enough hours exposure.
On a related note, exposure to hard vacuum doesnt cause much physical trauma to the bodies of most animals. If the creature attempted to hold its breath there would be some painful damage resulting from the futile effort but *not* any kind of explosion. If they did not hold their breath then they would fairly quickly pass out as the oxygen in their bloodstream rapidly was released into their lungs to be lost to the vacuum of space. However there would be almost no other damage and very little temperature effect even if the 'temperature' was near 3 degrees K. (temperature doesn't really mean all that much in a vacuum or near vacuum anyway). A person who didn't attempt to hold their breath would pass out probably in less than a minute and could be spared brain damage if returned to breathable atmosphere in about 5 minutes. Damage from radiation from the sun or whatever would probably be low unless there was unusual circumstances (you are in the earths radiation belts, the sun is particularily active, you are completely naked). Skin exposed to sunlight unfiltered by earths atmosphere would be badly sunburned quite quickly and the radiation dose when outside of both the earths magnetosphere and it's atmosphere would probably give you an unhealthy dose of hard radiation but it would probably take more than brief exposure to really mess you up with radiation poisoning.
On a related note, exposure to hard vacuum doesnt cause much physical trauma to the bodies of most animals. If the creature attempted to hold its breath there would be some painful damage resulting from the futile effort but *not* any kind of explosion. If they did not hold their breath then they would fairly quickly pass out as the oxygen in their bloodstream rapidly was released into their lungs to be lost to the vacuum of space. However there would be almost no other damage and very little temperature effect even if the 'temperature' was near 3 degrees K. (temperature doesn't really mean all that much in a vacuum or near vacuum anyway). A person who didn't attempt to hold their breath would pass out probably in less than a minute and could be spared brain damage if returned to breathable atmosphere in about 5 minutes. Damage from radiation from the sun or whatever would probably be low unless there was unusual circumstances (you are in the earths radiation belts, the sun is particularily active, you are completely naked). Skin exposed to sunlight unfiltered by earths atmosphere would be badly sunburned quite quickly and the radiation dose when outside of both the earths magnetosphere and it's atmosphere would probably give you an unhealthy dose of hard radiation but it would probably take more than brief exposure to really mess you up with radiation poisoning.
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