Almodusa Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 Not to be morbid but like imagine the gushing/pool of blood out of the area where it imploded
Cottonmouth Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 (edited) This is heartbreaking. Very tragic and sad. Especially since it all could have been prevented. The CEO was an idiot who led 4 other people to their deaths for his own ego. On a side note, it's weirdly fascinating the concept of pressure in extreme circumstances. In this instance there was a "catastrophic implosion". There was also the "Byford Dolphin" accident which had a "explosive decompression". The details are pretty gruesome, although in a similar vein, it was also immediate and quick to the point no one would have realised what had happened. Edited June 23, 2023 by Cottonmouth 1
arceus Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 5 minutes ago, Almodusa said: Not to be morbid but like imagine the gushing/pool of blood out of the area where it imploded the blood will evaporate too quick because of the pressure
AlanRickman1946 Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 14 hours ago, Sannie said: A movie where they explore the lives of five strangers who come together for a once-in-a-lifetime trip to the Titanic could slay. The movie could end right as the submarine implodes. It would be chilling. Like a morbid love actually
réveuse Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 This situation is absolutely tragic. And the fact that a 19 YEAR OLD BOY was one of the victims and they're making a documentary out of it already? Oh my goodness. If it was 10-20 years from now, I can understand them making a documentary but just at this moment?
duybeeGAshantiGA Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 4 hours ago, arceus said: the blood will evaporate too quick because of the pressure Can you please elaborate because my dumb ass doesnt get how blood a type of liquid can evaporate within the ocean water, another liquid. Sorry for being dumb. 1
GentleDance Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 (edited) 17 minutes ago, duybeeGAshantiGA said: Can you please elaborate because my dumb ass doesnt get how blood a type of liquid can evaporate within the ocean water, another liquid. Sorry for being dumb. Blood is made out of cells (most are red blood cells) + plasma (liquid), what happened to the sub will also happen to the cells Also I don't think they mean evaporate in a literal sense Edited June 23, 2023 by GentleDance
spiritboy Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 I will sound dumb asking this question but do people explode under that much pressure? I have a difficult time trying to understand what really happened to people. Did they melt or something? Or did they explode? 1
Sannie Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 2 minutes ago, spiritboy said: I will sound dumb asking this question but do people explode under that much pressure? I have a difficult time trying to understand what really happened to people. Did they melt or something? Or did they explode? From what I have read, the heat generated by such a rapid implosion would essentially vaporize the bodies. 1
Canonical Ensembl Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 3 minutes ago, spiritboy said: I will sound dumb asking this question but do people explode under that much pressure? I have a difficult time trying to understand what really happened to people. Did they melt or something? Or did they explode? The insides oozes out swiftly and diffuses through water. So the term “explode” is visually accurate. 1
SoSickOfThatSOL Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 29 minutes ago, duybeeGAshantiGA said: Can you please elaborate because my dumb ass doesnt get how blood a type of liquid can evaporate within the ocean water, another liquid. Sorry for being dumb. 5 minutes ago, spiritboy said: I will sound dumb asking this question but do people explode under that much pressure? I have a difficult time trying to understand what really happened to people. Did they melt or something? Or did they explode? Most of our body is water and fat. The pressure under those circumstances caused an implosion (like an explosion, just that instead of going forward, the particles went onward) of the submarine. The same happened to the bodies. The heat made the water go from liquid to gas in milliseconds and the remaining went from solid to ashes. Tragic but at least it occurred so fast they didn’t feel or notice a thing. 1
justjess Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 6 hours ago, katara said: Exactly my thoughts. "You think that people are not nice but the truth is that people are not dumb" PREACH 1 1
Otter Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 (edited) "In the course of the text conversation, first reported by Mail Online, Bloom raises concerns over safety - prompted by his son Sean - but is reassured by Rush who writes: "There hasn't even been an injury in 35 years in a non-military sub." Bloom says he also saw Rush in person in March, and they discussed the dive. Bloom says in his post: "He (Rush) was absolutely convinced that it was safer than crossing the street." https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/world-us-canada-65967464 This is one of the reasons why all the "stupid" or "they knew what they were signing up" takes rub me the wrong way. Only people have all the hindsight in the world because they've discovered the topic after incident and after journalists and experts broke down info into easily digestible soundbites & sourced documents that wouldn't readily be visible to potential customers. The same people want to suddenly act like submarine/deep water experts but the reality is most would have no personal idea of the saftey of any such vehicle and instead be reliant & trusting in "experts" and referential history. I.e never hearing any similar incident, the company running for x many years etc, and thus feeling safe. The disclaimer they sign is probably brushed away as a legality & necessity, just as most medicines warn of life threatening side effects. Anyway time to put this subject to rest besides more regulation being needed to prevent other cowboy CEO's creating high dangerous businesses Edited June 23, 2023 by Otter 4 1
bad guy Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 (edited) 2 hours ago, duybeeGAshantiGA said: Can you please elaborate because my dumb ass doesnt get how blood a type of liquid can evaporate within the ocean water, another liquid. Sorry for being dumb. At that level of intense pressure the blood would simply boil inside the body but since it happened within 30-50 nanoseconds it was basically evaporation. There would be no remains of any of the people in the sub. They all became nothing within less than a second. If they were a few thousand feet higher with less intensity in pressure, their implosion would have been a bit slower (seconds instead of nanoseconds) and perhaps there would be remains left. Edited June 23, 2023 by bad guy
duybeeGAshantiGA Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 56 minutes ago, Otter said: "In the course of the text conversation, first reported by Mail Online, Bloom raises concerns over safety - prompted by his son Sean - but is reassured by Rush who writes: "There hasn't even been an injury in 35 years in a non-military sub." Bloom says he also saw Rush in person in March, and they discussed the dive. Bloom says in his post: "He (Rush) was absolutely convinced that it was safer than crossing the street." https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/world-us-canada-65967464 This is one of the reasons why all the "stupid" or "they knew what they were signing up" takes rub me the wrong way. Only people have all the hindsight in the world because they've discovered the topic after incident and after journalists and experts broke down info into easily digestible soundbites & sourced documents that wouldn't readily be visible to potential customers. The same people want to suddenly act like submarine/deep water experts but the reality is most would have no personal idea of the saftey of any such vehicle and instead be reliant & trusting in "experts" and referential history. I.e never hearing any similar incident, the company running for x many years etc, and thus feeling safe. The disclaimer they sign is probably brushed away as a legality & necessity, just as most medicines warn of life threatening side effects. Anyway time to put this subject to rest besides more regulation being needed to prevent other cowboy CEO's creating high dangerous businesses Kinda this tbh.
duybeeGAshantiGA Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 1 hour ago, GentleDance said: Blood is made out of cells (most are red blood cells) + plasma (liquid), what happened to the sub will also happen to the cells Also I don't think they mean evaporate in a literal sense 1 hour ago, SoSickOfThatSOL said: Most of our body is water and fat. The pressure under those circumstances caused an implosion (like an explosion, just that instead of going forward, the particles went onward) of the submarine. The same happened to the bodies. The heat made the water go from liquid to gas in milliseconds and the remaining went from solid to ashes. Tragic but at least it occurred so fast they didn’t feel or notice a thing. 16 minutes ago, bad guy said: At that level of intense pressure the blood would simply boil inside the body but since it happened within 30-50 nanoseconds it was basically evaporation. There would be no remains of any of the people in the sub. They all became nothing within less than a second. If they were a few thousand feet higher with less intensity in pressure, their implosion would have been a bit slower (seconds instead of nanoseconds) and perhaps there would be remains left. Wow physics. Fascinating tbh. Thank you all.
Butters Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 https://www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8JqHUy2/ what i feared. james cam believes that they were trying to ascend before they imploded due to the ballast and fairing being found apart from each other. leading us to believe that they knew something was wrong with the integrity of the submersible cant imagine that terror
Rebel Lion Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 4 hours ago, réveuse said: This situation is absolutely tragic. And the fact that a 19 YEAR OLD BOY was one of the victims and they're making a documentary out of it already? Oh my goodness. If it was 10-20 years from now, I can understand them making a documentary but just at this moment? They made a movie based on the Titanic one month after it sank. It even stared one of the survivors. Unfortunately that movie was burned in a studio fire.
WildAmerican Posted June 23, 2023 Author Posted June 23, 2023 This thread is dying, so RIP to the victims of this tragic situation... Your hearts will go on will go on
Sergi91 Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 This guy was in the submarine just weeks ago but it got canceled due to bad weather The next trip was the deadly one.
onapearl Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 2 hours ago, Rebel Lion said: They made a movie based on the Titanic one month after it sank. It even stared one of the survivors. Unfortunately that movie was burned in a studio fire. I swear, everything about that boat was cursed.
mystery Posted June 23, 2023 Posted June 23, 2023 (edited) 1 hour ago, Sergi91 said: This guy was in the submarine just weeks ago but it got canceled due to bad weather The next trip was the deadly one. His entire video gave me chills, imagine being so close to ending up in it, this was literally weeks ago. Edited June 23, 2023 by mystery
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