...Believe it or not, us non phd's do know about black-body radiation and the S-B law.
You may be aware of the existence of these topics now that they have been explained to you, but you are entirely ignorant of how heat transfer takes place in reality. You made that abundantly clear with your whopping mistakes in your claims about the LM on the lunar surface.
And while some of the assumptions they use are different from mine, they have demonstrated it would take longer to reach extreme cold than I thought. Having said that, 2 things. 1)Many things within the cabin did not have to reach extreme temperatures to not function. According to NASA docs, for instances, many of the electronic components needed 30 F to function. (and max temp of only of 120F)
...and you don’t understand the actual conditions in which these systems operated, and showed you had no idea whatsoever how temperatures were controlled throughout the spacecraft.
2) Many of the posters argue that it wasn't cold that was the worry but rather heat.
The fact you don’t understand that different configurations and environmental conditions lead to different thermal concerns is your problem, not ours. The real problem, though, is that you are refusing to learn.
(Which I knew many would argue prior to posting my questions.)
You came to a forum peopled with engineers and knowledgeable laymen, and are spouting ignorant nonsense. Of course people are disagreeing with you, but they’re also trying to help you learn.
...But what about A13? They felt things getting colder not hotter. So either posters here are correct, and the astronauts were lying. Or the A13 Astronauts are correct and the posters here are wrong? Which is it?
The correct answer is neither, but instead that you don’t understand why this happened. The
problem is that you refuse to learn anything, but that’s your problem, not ours. However, should you decide determined ignorance is no longer a good look, we’ll be happy to help you.