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- From: dave@hpdstma.ptp.hp.com (Dave Waller)
- Subject: Re: Human bodies explode in vacuum?
- Message-ID: <By0xBy.BDA@scd.hp.com>
- Sender: dave@hpdstma (Dave Waller)
- Organization: Hewlett Packard
- References: <1992Nov16.145038.23449@geac.com> <1992Nov17.153453.7235@digi.lonestar.org> <1992Nov17.193610.14444@mailer.cc.fsu.edu> <1992Nov19.103112.3699@nntp.hut.fi> <14229@cis.rand.org>
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 16:47:58 GMT
- Lines: 34
-
- In article <14229@cis.rand.org>, schutz@rand.ORG (Karl Schutz) writes:
- |> In article <1992Nov19.103112.3699@nntp.hut.fi>, s32905u@saha.hut.fi (Jouni Ilari Polkko) writes:
- |>
- |> Question: what's the difference between breathing air in a chamber under pressure
- |> and breathing air (via scuba I assume :-) ) at an equivalent depth in water?
-
- The bigest difference is in the method of delivery -- in a chamber you are
- breathing air through a considerably larger orifice (your mouth) than while
- on SCUBA (the second stage of a regulator).
-
- In addition, despite the excellent job reg manufacturers have done in
- designing regs that have a low cracking pressure, the very nature of a demand
- regulator REQUIRES that there be a cracking pressure, and hence, this is
- something your lungs have to work against that they don't while simply
- sitting on a pressurized chamber.
-
- For these reasons, it is always more work to breath off a regulator than
- in a chamber that is pressurized to an equivalent depth.
-
- |> Your body absorbs nitrogen due to elevated partial pressures (Henry's Law).
- |> Isn't pressure is pressure is pressure, whether water or air, or whatever,
- |> induced? So, nitrogen (I assume) narcosis should be an equivalent problem in a
- |> chamber ... yes/no?
-
- Yes, and yoru analysis is essentially correct.
-
- With regard to the question of has anyone experienced increased breathing
- resistance due to increased gas density at depth, I have, to a notable, but
- not interfering, degree. This has been at extreme depth, however. I have not
- noted this difference at typical recreational diving depths.
-
- --
- Dave Waller
- YMCA Instructor
-