<Snipped quote by Bonjour xx>
Absolute zero, as far as the party's been able to tell so far. The ship appears to have been powered down for some time and so all life support, including the heating, has been offline for what seems like years.
The good news is that the ice machine's still fully stocked.
Grr...
With the interior essentially being the vacuum of space, I guess my blood just froze the hole shut, but I'll need a doctor and a pressurized environment to have surgery. I guess I'm going to be cloning myself a new hand before long.
Ok. Time for lessons in elementary astrophysics with Dr. Hundred Zanzibar Thermopolis Kira
Space. Is. Not. Cold.
There is very little matter in a vacuum, hence, very little heat transference by any means other than radiation. As such, object cool down at a markedly slower rate than in atmosphere unless interacting with volumes of other, cold matter, like interstellar gas clouds. Depending upon the insulating qualities of the
Lone Star's hull, likely to be substantial as a long-voyage space craft, it's size, and how long it has been in the current star system, the Star is more likely to be hazardously hot than it is to be cold. Especially if many of it's systems are still functioning, as the bots and depressurization sensors seem to indicate. That is an awful lot of energy with nowhere to go, just building up inside the ship.
If it really is approaching absolute zero inside of the ship that is a much more interesting anomaly than otherwise.
Also then we get into the complications involved with superfluidity and quantum hydrodynamics with H2O in those conditions. If that is the case than Hundred will just stay outside in the meteor shower, thank you very much, she'd have better chances with them.
tl;dr: Stop having fun with your space opera guys! Because physics!