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"Brian Gaff" wrote in message ...
At the risk of putting folk off their food, would not the effect depend on the speed of the depressurisation? No. The human body's internal pressure is not high enough to cause an explosion, and human tissue is both elastic and soft enough to "ride out" a very substantial, very rapid pressure change. Note the human body's response to very sharp pressure waves: http://www.ciar.org/ttk/hew/hew/Nwfaq/Nfaq5.html Section 5.6.2... "As a general guide, city areas are completely destroyed ... by overpressures of 5 psi, with heavy damage extending out at least to the 3 psi contour. "Humans are actually quite resistant to the direct effect of overpressure. Pressures of over 40 psi are required before lethal effects are noted. This pressure resistance makes it possible for unprotected submarine crews to escape from emergency escape locks at depths as great as one hundred feet (the record for successful escape is actually an astonishing 600 feet, representing a pressure of 300 psi). Loss of eardrums can occur, but this is not a life threatening injury." There will be local problems with the bends and ruptured ear drums, but for the most part, living tissue can expand, contract, and vent rapidly enough to handle a sharp pressure change. Mike Miller, Materials Engineer |
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