Paradigm6790 t1_iy2mvwi wrote
You can possibly survive the vacuum of space for 2 minutes. For fun let's say 1 minute. It's all theoretical.
You can survive 0 seconds at the bottom of the ocean. You just die.
No pressure >>>>>>>>> lots of pressure
nooneknowsgreenguy t1_iy31zxt wrote
"Good Lord! That's over 5000 atmospheres of pressure!"
"How many atmospheres can the ship withstand?"
"Well, it was built for space travel, so anywhere between zero and one."
HazelFrederick t1_iy47ei0 wrote
Sure, they have the Braves, but it’s a third rate symphony.
nickyurick t1_iy43y05 wrote
What's this from?
konami9407 t1_iy4490k wrote
Futurama
bumpyclock t1_iy2tc0d wrote
It’s pressure differential. In space it’s 1atm. Bottom of the ocean it’s many atm
Realistic_Truck t1_iy3yfyp wrote
Up and atm!
bak3donh1gh t1_iy2trwn wrote
A vacuum has 1atm of pressure? I think you should check your numbers.
MannishSeal t1_iy2urgw wrote
No they said "differential". There is a 1 atm pressure differential between the vacuum of space and earths atmosphere.
bumpyclock t1_iy2vhti wrote
I said pressure differential. Earth has 1 atm, space has 0.
bruinslacker t1_iy2y3os wrote
I think he means the pressure differential between space and your body. Most of the time there is about 1 atm of pressure pushing against your body. To avoid expanding or shrinking your body pushes back at approximately 1 atm. If you were suddenly flung into space the pressure inside your body would still be about 1 atm but the pressure outside would be nearly 0.
Tsjernobull t1_iy3704s wrote
r/confidentlyincorrect
Nothammer t1_iy2u9y9 wrote
There's actually a little pressure in space. But not 1 atm for sure.
bak3donh1gh t1_iy2ujmh wrote
Space is relative. So yeah a little pressure surrounding the earth, surprisingly far away as well. But it the space between galaxies I'm gunno go with no pressure. As this video will teach(I did not actually watch the whole video)
Nothammer t1_iy2uvlm wrote
Even I between galaxies there are molecules from time to time. Space is nearly a perfect vaccum though and we're talking in absolute miniscule amounts of pressure here. It's absolutely negligible, but it's technically a liiiittle pressure.
[deleted] OP t1_iy311fz wrote
[deleted]
Vertebrae_Viking t1_iy36aik wrote
Technicalities like this are to be ignored if you don’t want to piss off a random physicist.
Edit: medics don’t care about outer space.
Nothammer t1_iy38tdt wrote
Hehehehehe
Schuben t1_iy3nayb wrote
Like a general practicioner or are we talking about specialists?
Vertebrae_Viking t1_iy4htdp wrote
Yeah. Uh. I’ll just blame that on autocorrect.
jkmoule t1_iy2utag wrote
They mean the differential is 1atm in space. Because it's 1atm of pressure within earth's atmosphere at sea level, but is nearly 0atm in the vacuum of space, so the pressure differential is 1atm.
Meanwhile, pressure increases by 1atm roughly every 10m of depth in the ocean. The average ocean depth is 3700m, so a pressure of about 370atm. The pressure differential between the surface and that is 369atm, far larger than the 1atm differential between the surface and the vacuum of space.
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