Submitted by houstoncouchguy t3_111q9v1 in askscience
Of course we all know that food left in a near-vacuum will dry out and prevent dangerous spoilage from microorganisms. But what if the food was kept moist? If you kept a steak under a thin level of water by some means, would the steak spoil at room temperature in a near-vacuum? If not, what is the highest pressure that moist food like a steak could be kept in without spoilage?
I know that some organisms are able to live in low pressure environments, but would they thrive enough to become toxic?
athomasflynn t1_j8h7uzh wrote
In a near vacuum water is going to sublimate off of whatever you store in that environment. Some organisms like tardigrades are able to survive exposure to vacuum, but they don't "live" in it and they definitely don't reproduce.