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   sci.space.science      Space and planetary science and related      1,217 messages   

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   Message 237 of 1,217   
   Brian Gaff to Henry Spencer   
   Re: Would You Really Pop Like a Balloon    
   11 Nov 03 11:05:15   
   
   From: Briang1@blueyonder.co.uk   
      
   At the risk of putting folk off their food, would not the effect depend on   
   the speed of the depressurisation?   
      
   Brian   
      
   --   
   Brian Gaff....   
    graphics are great, but the blind can't hear them   
   Email: briang1@blueyonder.co.uk   
   ____________________________________________________________________________   
   __________________________________   
      
      
   "Henry Spencer"  wrote in message   
   news:Ho5rF1.DD1@spsystems.net...   
   | In article ,   
   | Chris Wood  wrote:   
   | >If a person were suddenly placed in a vacuum, e.g.,   
   | >thrown out of a spaceship without a protective/pressure-ized   
   | >suit -- a la science fiction movies, would they really pop   
   | >like a balloon, or is this an exaggeration?   
   |   
   | It's not merely an exaggeration, it's a myth.  Animal experiments, one   
   | test-chamber spacesuit accident, and the Soyuz 11 disaster demonstrated   
   | decades ago that nothing much happens when a person is placed in vacuum.   
   |   
   | The first event of note is that after 10-15 seconds, he suddenly loses   
   | consciousness due to lack of oxygen.  Some uncertain time later, perhaps a   
   | minute, the accumulated brain damage from lack of oxygen is bad enough   
   | that he's effectively dead.  (If those numbers sound short, it's because   
   | in most comparable accidents on the ground, there is considerable air left   
   | in the lungs, and that makes a large difference.)   
   |   
   | Serious physical damage from the lack of pressure takes rather longer than   
   | that.  The bodies of the Soyuz 11 crew spent perhaps ten minutes in   
   | vacuum, and looked normal enough that the recovery team started CPR.   
   | --   
   | MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec    | Henry Spencer   
   | pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well.  |   
   henry@spsystems.net   
      
      
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