TITAN SUB TRAGEDY: What Happens To A Body Under Pressure?

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Lucid Med

Lucid Med

Күн бұрын

Hi All,
In this thought-provoking episode, we delve into the captivating world of extreme pressure and its unimaginable effects on the human body. Brace yourself for "TITAN TRAGEDY: What Happens To A Body Under Pressure?"
Join us as we embark on a gripping exploration of the science behind high-pressure environments and the harrowing consequences they impose on the human form. From deep-sea depths to air flight, we uncover the startling truth about the fragility of our bodies when faced with immense pressure.
Prepare to be astounded as we unveil the physiological transformations that occur when our bodies are pushed to their limits. Witness firsthand the shocking implications on the respiratory, circulatory, and nervous systems as we uncover the intricate mechanisms that enable our bodies to adapt-or fail-in the face of overwhelming pressure.
Through engaging visuals, expert interviews, and cutting-edge scientific research, we shed light on the tragic tales of those who have encountered extreme pressure situations.
Whether you're a science enthusiast, an adventure seeker, or simply curious about the limits of human endurance, "TITAN TRAGEDY: What Happens To A Body Under Pressure?" is an eye-opening journey you won't want to miss.
This video was suggested by our viewers! Keep em' coming!
Stay healthy and lucid 💡
Danielle
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Disclaimer: This video or the content within it is not meant as medical advice or a prescription for treatment and you should contact you doctor for evaluation to discuss your use of any of the products referenced throughout
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Пікірлер: 170
@geoffreyholliday1971
@geoffreyholliday1971 Жыл бұрын
My ears pop in 10 feet of water in a swimming pool. I can't even imagine 9000 feet. I believe they died immediately. No suffering
@KazumaIshinpabu
@KazumaIshinpabu Жыл бұрын
English Translation: No they Died and felt every bit of that’d on instant that Pain of Water pressure felt worst than any Train wreck or Car accident ever felt on this Instant Death pain short lived
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi geoffrey! Thanks for commenting and I believe you're correct. As more information and analysis comes to light the exact depths and specifics will possibly prove me wrong but one thing I do know is it was near instantaneous. Milliseconds as I understand it which is a blessing if this was fated to happen. D
@martinleavitt6094
@martinleavitt6094 Жыл бұрын
The bodies were PULVERIZED..at that depth...after the initial shock of the inevitable...they didn't suffer for long,if at all......
@MS-xt8ue
@MS-xt8ue Жыл бұрын
5 ms and it is all over. 150 ms nerve signaling to the brain from which there is nothing left, so yes there is nothing to believe, in fact they didn't notice anything at all, its impossible.
@colinjava8447
@colinjava8447 Жыл бұрын
​@@KazumaIshinpabuThat's nonsense, they were essentially pancakes faster than the time it takes for the brain to even register the pain or even visually observing the implosion. Their eyes may have just seen the implosion, but it would have been too fast to register what was going on.
@jimsteinway695
@jimsteinway695 Жыл бұрын
Look at the rail car example when the car had a vacuum put inside. It crumpled like a tin can under my mother in law. I’m sure under tons of water it was even faster and instantaneous. They never knew what hit them. What I don’t understand and I’m an engineer, is what they were thinking? Carbon is good in tension but not good in compression. They had no chance.
@ronaldross-sv9hm
@ronaldross-sv9hm Жыл бұрын
😢wow may theirs souls rest in peace 😢😢😢😢😢😢😢
@DavidSmith-ze2wi
@DavidSmith-ze2wi Жыл бұрын
From what I've seen over the last three years there's a lot of brains that can't comprehend much at normal atmospheric pressure.
@MonaroMel1
@MonaroMel1 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating, and so so sad. Thank you for sharing 🥺
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi MonaroMel! I share your sentiments. And now I'm hearing that the son of the one guy on board was terrified to go on the trip. 😟😟
@corychallice7705
@corychallice7705 Жыл бұрын
It takes the human brain 14 milliseconds to process what your eyes are seeing and even longer to process pain. It only takes 1 millisecond for implosion
@turtlejeepjen314
@turtlejeepjen314 Жыл бұрын
Wow- you are a real TROOPER!!!! May you have a speedy recovery!!🤧🙂🐢
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi Jen! Thanks for commenting and when I tell you my left rib cage was not to be ignored during this recording-I'm not exaggerating. Funny you have the sneeze emoji as well because that happened today and brought me to my knees lol Danielle
@bufordt.justice1539
@bufordt.justice1539 Жыл бұрын
I was always taught to “Respect the Sea!” If you don’t, tragedy is guaranteed.
@colinjava8447
@colinjava8447 Жыл бұрын
What if you don't respect it but stay on land? I guess a tsunami could still get you.
@eblita3698
@eblita3698 Жыл бұрын
@@colinjava8447 We have pretty much the same saying in my country as noone in Denmark is far from a coast. No, you don't have to stay on land. Respect is to understand it. If you can't swim, wear a life jacket. If you want to use a lilo, don't if the wind is off shore. If you want to go 4 Km to the bottom, you should know about the pressure down there and make sure that the sub is professional and certified
@RavingKats
@RavingKats Жыл бұрын
Titan made its first dive to the Titanic in July 2021. In total, OceanGate undertook 6 dives to the Titanic in 2021 and 7 in 2022. This was the first dive to Titanic in 2023 after 2 previously scheduled dives were called off due to bad weather or issues with the submersible. They'd planned on 18 dives this season IIRC. Not sure where you got 3 dives from. Third try this year maybe, but the cyclical fatigue is from all the previous expeditions. There were also approx 50 test dives since it had launched, which is basically all the expeditions that got canned due to issues.
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi Ravingkats! Thanks for commenting. Thanks for clarifying the # of dives. Ultimately experts attributed this failure (as you said) to cyclical fatigue so whether this was the 3rd or the 18th dive there were clear issues from design to safety. Now I understand what they're trying to do with expanding our exploration of the ocean and that this has vast implications for research as well but, while I'm no expert on submersibles, this had trouble written all over it. Nothing is perfect, and of course there are inherent risks with this type of activity but as I understand things the type of pressures this sub was exposed to should've retired it after only a few dives. D
@metavision8292
@metavision8292 Жыл бұрын
​@@lucidmed3343 I saw a utuber that went before this last one, his was cancelled due to weather. He made a video. I'll post his name
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
@@metavision8292 Hi! I know exactly who you're talking about. Ironically I'm watching it right now with my daughter over facetime!!! Danielle
@lins_z2
@lins_z2 Жыл бұрын
What do you mean creepy! The dumbo octopus on that picture is the most adorable thing ever. Alan Jamieson, a deep sea explorer, explains about that in his ted talk, I really recommend it to dispels the misconceptions of the life in the deep sea. In terms of what happens to the body… something similar but worse to the Byford Dolphin accident might’ve happened, where the bodies inside the chambers exploded and their blood boiled, and the ones that were expelled from the chamber ir hit by the pressure and were out, were dismembered, their body parts fragmented, followed by the expulsion of their organs from chest and abdomen. Very very gory to say the least. If you want a fake simulation of what might happen in even less depths, the mythbusters did a experiment of the effects from a deep sea implosion with a faux human with a scuba suit. TLDR is that the body exploded upwards towards the helm. The passengers in the OceanGate submersible were not wearing any special suits or helmets…
@quink2376
@quink2376 Жыл бұрын
Hi. Thank you for the way you explained this. Do you think they would have heard cracking noises as they were going down before the implosion?
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi quink, possibly though I feel like the mechanics of the implosion are way out of my area of expertise. If they did it was a millisecond before they passed, At those depths the general consensus is any miniscule breech would've caused a rapid collapse.
@candydandy2694
@candydandy2694 Жыл бұрын
Apparently they did. The hull had acoustic sensor to warn of imminent hull failure. It appears that the ballast had been released and that they were making a run for the surface at the time of the hull failure.
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
@@candydandy2694 Hi candydandy! I haven't heard this yet...absolutely terrifying...those poor people
@donmcpherson9568
@donmcpherson9568 Жыл бұрын
We'll never know unless there were data recorders on the submersible. I tend to think that they didn't hear anything at all all the way up to the split second catastrophic end.
@Ravenhawk1574
@Ravenhawk1574 Жыл бұрын
@@donmcpherson9568 There were transcripts that may have indicated they were in trouble and were trying to ascend. Still waiting on confirmation if the transcripts that were released are the official transcripts or documented the actual event.
@jackwoods9604
@jackwoods9604 Жыл бұрын
Wonder if Sub Titan Passengers Heard Brief Strange Noises Right Before it Imploded
@guyblack172
@guyblack172 Жыл бұрын
I have been fascinated on the effects of extreme pressure on the body. I’ve always wanted to know what exactly would happen to a body if they just appeared on the ocean floor. The visual I get is the body being crumpled like a piece of paper being balled up, then the twisted husk being violently injected back to “form” with highly pressurized water - the result is a broken meat dummy, skin and vessels burst
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi guyblack! Same! I've thought about this since I went diving the very first time 20 years ago. D
@donmcpherson9568
@donmcpherson9568 Жыл бұрын
The bodies were liquefied and emulsified with the sea water. Only the granulated fragments of bone were left of the bodies.
@Filthy_Larry
@Filthy_Larry Жыл бұрын
This should have been Rain’s fatality in Mortal Kombat 11
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
@@Filthy_Larry 😂😂
@janetharned4343
@janetharned4343 Жыл бұрын
The submersible Titan was never certified and horribly imploded
@rottsandspots
@rottsandspots Жыл бұрын
Very interesting video - thank you! I have a question. Normally in a sub you are subject to and breathing air at atmospheric pressure, so no need to decompress. BUT - in the Titan there was emergency oxygen via scuba tanks, wherr the air is at pressure. So if they had been found at the bottom, would they have needed decompression stops given they had been breathing pressurised air? I think they would (but may be wrong). The air going into the lungs was at pressure, so within the lung tissue and air cavities there was higher pressure. Also, the nitrogen from the scuba gear was at pressure, and so would build up in all body tissues. Decompression stops help to slowly remove the excess nitrogen in the body tissue - too quickly and it fizzes out. As most of the body tissues were at atmospheric pressure, the nitrogen would return to atmospheric pressure within those tissues, I would imagine pretty quickly, so although saturated, there should not be much 'fizzing' - except tissue in the lung cavity - which would I believe remain at higher pressure while breathing in pressurised air. When learning scuba in a shallow pool we do not need decomposition stops, as the body is never subjected to pressure. That would indicate that you would not need any decompression. BUT I had a dive instructor friend who got the bends after a deep dive. Thereafter he got the bends twice more at very shallow depths and was told he could never dive again -not even teach students in the pool. My friends experience, along with the fact that the lung tissue/cavity itself would be under higher pressure and saturated with high pressure nitrogen, plus most of the men were in 50s and 60s means that if possible decompression stops going up would be preferable, but if not possible then well worth getting them up asap as I believe they had brought a decompression chamber with them Sadly of course they are deceased. Rest In Peace.
@linnexmiles
@linnexmiles Жыл бұрын
I was curious to know about this. Now, I kinda wish I didn't. Yes, you cannot unsee the myth busters' episode...
@NotKamalasBich
@NotKamalasBich Жыл бұрын
If you play the movie "Titanic" backwards It is a feel good story about a ship that jumps out of the ocean to save a bunch of people and take them back to safety.
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Good morning SEVEN-gy! Thank you for starting my workday off with a laugh 😁😁 D
@bennetttyler6019
@bennetttyler6019 Жыл бұрын
😂 this is hilarious
@Filthy_Larry
@Filthy_Larry Жыл бұрын
I thought it was about a bunch of people taking swimming lessons in the Arctic and went into a rising boat to get warm and eat dinner.
@NotKamalasBich
@NotKamalasBich Жыл бұрын
@@Filthy_Larry It just might be. Lol
@stamboli6455
@stamboli6455 Жыл бұрын
I think that cannot be generalized. I was in a submersible in 10 thousand meters when it's imploded. I was thinking, what the hell, my clothes get wet! Then I dived to the surface, swam to the beach and ordered a cocktail.
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi Stamboli6455! 10k meters! I’m honored that such an adventurer took the time to comment! (Really:). I sat here giggling so thank you for that. Btw what cocktail did you order after imploding? D
@stamboli6455
@stamboli6455 Жыл бұрын
Hi lucidmed3343! Cocktail was a Yellow Crashed Submarine ;-)
@justabill5780
@justabill5780 Жыл бұрын
The implosion of the sub would have taken approximately 1 millisecond. The heat generated from the friction of the gasses bing compressed would have been close to the surface of the sun. The bodies would have been pulverized/liquified instantly. They never knew what hit them.
@turtlejeepjen314
@turtlejeepjen314 Жыл бұрын
The cocktail ordered: Cherry Bomb & Lemon CRUSH Vodka Tonic
@KM-mh3ds
@KM-mh3ds Жыл бұрын
A lot of things being said about these 5 men and the Titan. But one word has been on my mind. And that is, brave. In spite of everything, it took a lot of something for them to get on that thing. Adventurous souls. And Brave. RIP.
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi KM, yes I can't disagree with that sentiment however one theme that has come up for me during my research is while we need these people with these spirits of adventure to move us forward in our exploration efforts, most people who have done missions such as this have historically been highly trained. Put through months, if not years of selection, and even then some would be disqualified. With this age of "extreme tourism"...none of this is occurring which angers me for some reason...I think the word that has been tossed around is hubris. I don't know how I feel...a combination of gratitude for their sacrifices yet feel it was a senseless waste of life. D
@AmberC62606
@AmberC62606 Жыл бұрын
I agree. Takes a brave heart to get on a Sub and dive 13K feet down into the ocean.
@KM-mh3ds
@KM-mh3ds Жыл бұрын
@@lucidmed3343 so very true. It does make you mad. Why couldn’t he just stick with tried and true measures.
@KM-mh3ds
@KM-mh3ds Жыл бұрын
@@AmberC62606 I couldn’t have done it.
@timmunro7313
@timmunro7313 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your commentary, I watched a few of these and yours is at the top 👍🏼
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi timmunro! Thanks for commenting and I appreciate that. Part of me resisted even doing this video because I felt that it was bordering on sensationalism but it fascinated me. Terrifying.. Danielle
@joey24698
@joey24698 Жыл бұрын
while they didn't feel the event itself, they most likely were crapping their pants because they knew the submersible was in trouble because ballast had been dropped and it was on an ascent @ about 1hr 45mins into the dive, so no way did they even get to the titanic
@chuffa1130
@chuffa1130 Жыл бұрын
Has been explain to me many times but it's still hard to comprehend, The humans were first pureed and then cooked beyond recognition, who there have been some sort of safety suit and pressurized mechanism so they can get back to the surface safely?
@Joel-d7q1f
@Joel-d7q1f Жыл бұрын
Hope your ribs feel better
@Sonne-U235-
@Sonne-U235- Жыл бұрын
Such Deepts are more hostile than to travel Interstallar, there is NO room for failure at such deeps even an Hair crack would result instant Implosion. Trtieste(submersible) has gone to chalenger deept at near 11km deep(1000-1100bar presure) in year 1960, the bathyscaphe (presure chamber) was 2.2tones 1.2m diametar spherical Titanium Made and it was tested in Closed Presure Vessel at 1500bar at which this sphear was smaller 10 cm. To imagine you could be in this presure and substain direct hit by atomic bomb (so strong it is). This 10cm of Diameter change is the Problem with Carbon because the Carbon cannot work it is very strong but unable to be Elastic and this makes cracks with Cicles of presurising and the depresurissing.
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi nenad! Thanks for taking the time to comment and your excellent weigh in on this. Many are asking about why carbon fiber was chosen...can't quite wrap my head around that as I'm assuming a ton of research had gone into design...apparently not enough though. D
@lauraspangler5179
@lauraspangler5179 Жыл бұрын
Very fascinating! And are you from Philadelphia or somewhere in the surrounding area? Just the use of “wooder” the way I say it 😂😂
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi Laura! Thanks for commenting and I'm in NJ. I see that they've retrieved the wreckage so this will hopefully tell us something about how this went down (no pun intended). I have a ton of PA patients :) Danielle
@Filthy_Larry
@Filthy_Larry Жыл бұрын
@@lucidmed3343new jersey too. 😂😂😂🎉
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
@@Filthy_Larry Heyyyyyy! Hello Jersey!
@Filthy_Larry
@Filthy_Larry Жыл бұрын
@@lucidmed3343 one of the best states in America next to Idaho’s and Alaska
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi Laura! It's so funny but several viewers have pointed that out to me and I never realized I say water like that lol. I'm from NJ so not far from Philadelphia. D
@erickrohn2970
@erickrohn2970 Жыл бұрын
So why you wearing a Stethoscope? To make you look more credible?
@CathleneHartridge-ye5xh
@CathleneHartridge-ye5xh Жыл бұрын
😂 wow
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi erick! Thanks for commenting..if 30 years of practice doesn't speak to my credibility I don't know what does. The stethoscope is something I've done for branding. However now that youtube has taken into consideration the licenses that many medical professionals running a channel hold-I might do away with it. Not sure what you do for a living...fellow HCP? construction? psychic? don't care but we all use "props". 😉😉Danielle
@patrickcannell2258
@patrickcannell2258 Жыл бұрын
And details on the bodies recovered from Air France 477 at 4000 meters under sea?
@turtlejeepjen314
@turtlejeepjen314 Жыл бұрын
Okay, AM I the ONLY person who thinks it is VERY uncomfortable to have to literally sit all SQUISHED IN & cris-cross the legs & huddle with you knees to your chest JUST to fit 5 folks in there???!!! For $250,000 at LEAST give them SOMETHING to sit on… my old Yoga mat would be luxurious compared to Titan!!! (It looks like my sorority sisters all cramming into a rented van so we could all go on the Mardi Gras road trip! Which was great until someone puked in the van on the way back!!)😑🙄🙂🐢
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
I love this! Cracked me up because the description was spot on...we've all taken that van trip amiga...
@iancormie9916
@iancormie9916 Жыл бұрын
No barf bag should be left behind.
@quink2376
@quink2376 Жыл бұрын
And how much can 4 people useriously see out that small window ?
@allenlorti2420
@allenlorti2420 Жыл бұрын
I blame the Oceangate CEO for this disaster. The families should sue the company's pants off in spite of all the waivers signed by the participants. The CEO had a 'Death Wish'. The construction of the vessel coupled with the numerous submersible problems they experienced in past dives showed negligence on the part of the Oceangate Company to protect it's occupants.
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hey allenlorti! Ultimately yes, their deaths sit with him I agree. The thing I want to know is how the safety of the sub was explained and portraited to the passengers. These were highly intelligent people on that trip and I know they didn't just blindly agree to pay that money and assume everything was safe. There had to be misrepresentation there somewhere because if it were me, that would've been the first conversation I had. I don't know..hubris? D
@IamDEADfred
@IamDEADfred Жыл бұрын
WAYYYYYY more than the 3rd dive....it was at least the 13th I believe
@NonToxicShocker
@NonToxicShocker Жыл бұрын
PSI stands for ‘Pounds’ per Square Inch. Not pressure per square inch. Pounds as in the weight measurement. As in, there was “6000 pounds per square inch - 6000psi” ‘OF’ pressure on the hull of the Titan. As a professional, you should already know that though?
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi Non! Yes I do know that but every now and then when recording I make a mistake here and there but count on all of you to most assuredly correct me right away. I made several mistakes in this video...the medical information is accurate but as more information came out about the sub, timeline, and depths, there's absolutely inaccuracies. D
@georgecarberry9222
@georgecarberry9222 Жыл бұрын
Sadly, ppl just cannot comprehend what it means to be killed by the depths of the ocean in spite of so many explanations. It seems the explanations have to be brutally graphic & accompanied by visual aides that show the details of such a horric death. In addition, ppl can't seem to grasp the concept of a death so instantaneous that the victim is dead literally before the brain can even comprehend the fact. The victim literally suffers no pain, as he/she perceives nothing ontoward prior to expiring! No remains beyond a blob of compressed tissue is available to be recovered. A small blob at that. DNA would be the only means of identifying the remains. As difficult as it is to comprehend, ppl must begin to comprehend that there are no bodies to recover. No bodies at all. There are likely some blobs of tissue & that is all that can be recovered. If anything can be recognized it will be done by DNA & that is all. No other method will be possible as the tissue would be unrecognizable as an individual human being. Someone needs to give a clear & graphic explanation of the way those 5 ppl died & what "remains" may have been recovered. Ppl just don't get it at this point!!!
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi George! Thanks for your thoughtful comment. I see they've recovered wreckage so hopefully this will give us some details about how this went down. There's a certain fascination with this because the ocean is a scary and vast place. Even seeing some reaction videos of people with thalassophobia watching dive videos is so interesting. Is it because we're living through their eyes and experiencing their fear? Humans are strange at the very least but some of those videos have millions of views. I'm sure as this goes on someone will give a very detailed and graphic description of the remains. Danielle
@katecelestin3736
@katecelestin3736 Жыл бұрын
There is 2 buddy hiding under the Titanic boat.
@richardstephens3642
@richardstephens3642 Жыл бұрын
Yup she's an EXPERT!!! She has got a clue about an IMPLOTION and constantly goes OFF TOPIC to mention something else maybe she should stick with being a nurse unless she's an EXPERT on that topic too
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi richardstephens 3642! thanks for commenting...definitely NOT an expert on implosion...I am a diver however and yea...I'd consider myself an expert on nursing as well...duh. Thanks for watching though :) Danielle
@Syclone90
@Syclone90 Жыл бұрын
As this story unfolds you find out more and more and more negative business practices and construction of submersibles by Ocean gate and people want to know what happens to a body in an implosion we love a good tragedy it seems that way
@davids2cents594
@davids2cents594 Жыл бұрын
probably because even the media was asking when they will do Boby recovery's. and nobody was willing to tell them the truth they turned to meat mist
@brianbarnes2685
@brianbarnes2685 Жыл бұрын
Everybody got a conclusion
@gopherchucksgamingnstuff2263
@gopherchucksgamingnstuff2263 Жыл бұрын
Not to be crass. Stomp on a catsup packet and you will know implosion.
@turtlejeepjen314
@turtlejeepjen314 Жыл бұрын
*stomps packet* 😳😧 *never goes underwater in ocean again* 😑
@gopherchucksgamingnstuff2263
@gopherchucksgamingnstuff2263 Жыл бұрын
@@turtlejeepjen314 I will not go in it myself it freaks me out.
@reclusenz
@reclusenz Жыл бұрын
A long story short - they were turned into mince.
@quink2376
@quink2376 Жыл бұрын
They were turned into liquid and squished into the ocean, like toothpaste coming out of a tube. The temperature got hotter than the sun.
@reclusenz
@reclusenz Жыл бұрын
@@quink2376 That is why I find it hilarious when the reporters were asking questions about a possible body recovery.
@quink2376
@quink2376 Жыл бұрын
@@reclusenz for sure. However, another channel put a video out saying body parts could float to the surface. But I don't think there is anything to recover. I feel for the 19 year old. 🙏rip people
@reclusenz
@reclusenz Жыл бұрын
@@quink2376 Problem is - there are fishies in the ocean and they love a good nibble.
@neinzukorruption9321
@neinzukorruption9321 Жыл бұрын
the noise in the background is annoying and much too loud.
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi Nein! Sorry about that! I try to remain aware of the music and sound effects but when my airpods give out it's tough to get that right. Danielle
@Charlie_12x3
@Charlie_12x3 Жыл бұрын
I’m more interested in knowing who payed for the absurd amount of resources that went into finding them. When I innocent child goes missing here on sea level only a limited amount of resources are exhausted but with those five billionaires who were just on an adventure not for scientific purposes but just cause they were rich and could take the risk they got the military involved, the coast guard, private search and rescues teams, LiDAR equipped aircraft flying back and fourth sweeping the ocean floor I can go on. I’m not saying they didn’t deserve every chance they had but my question is why isn’t not a quarter of the effort that went into this put into finding anyone that goes missing especially innocent children who weren’t taking a risk just playing in the playground or wonder off a little to far from the sight of their parents. People are saying that their families paid billions but I doubt the military would take payments. Tens of millions of dollars went into their search. My sister said at least they didn’t suffer but they did suffer from hypothermia no food no water loss of oxygen breathing in carbon dioxide in the pitch black if the submersible didn’t Implode immediately upon reaching a certain depth in the ocean which would have immediately turned them into fish food. There was a man that worked on a oil rig and his job consisted of deep sea diving. His deep see diving helmet (mark v) malfunctioned while he was tapping into a line at the ocean floor and he was wearing a camera which caught everything. The moment that mark v failed he was sucked out through the hole on the cylindrical helmet and turned into particles which instantly attracted hundreds of fish and they all ate that poor man. I feel bad for those five individuals that died on their journey to the abyss but one has to wonder you can only try your luck so many times before tragedy occurs cause one passenger had 35 successful journeys to the titanic ruins and I mean after that many successful trips down to the oceans floor and seeing the titanic so many times he knew the risks of the dive. James Cameron on his latest expedition built a submersible to go twice as deep and it went successfully because he built the submersible and had a group of the brightest engineers working round the clock to make sure it would sustain such pressures. These gentlemen may they rest in peace had billions why didn’t they build a very durable submersible and have it tested in a pressure water chamber like James Cameron did. I feel the designers of that submersible should be held accountable for selling it to them knowing they would use it to go much deeper than it’s threshold. But I believe they did not inform much of anyone that they would be diving that deep.
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi Charlie! Thanks for commenting and this has been another topic that has come up through the comments..the amount of manpower and money this took. I'm thinking since they knew that once word got out this tragedy occurred they knew they'd come under scrutiny and needed to show they were making a concerted effort to find them. Either that or this was truly a diversion. The missing children? I have my theories on that which I won't go into on this platform but may be something I discuss on patreon at some point. There were clearly design issues and when strong concerns were raised they fired their director of marine operations, David Lochridge. Not sure what the thought process was there since the owner of oceangate was also a passenger on these excursions. D
@Joel-d7q1f
@Joel-d7q1f Жыл бұрын
There are no bends when your in a sub
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi user-w2- thanks for commenting and that's correct. I realized I said "when a sub surfaces too quickly" but really only meant a diver. Subs (of course) are pressurized just like a plane is but we've seen airplanes depressurize so I left it in. D
@Joel-d7q1f
@Joel-d7q1f Жыл бұрын
@@lucidmed3343 I liked your content an was in a bad mood so wanted to be picky I guess I do like your content
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
@@Joel-d7q1f hey and I appreciate you letting me know that...means everything to me. I try not to take comments too personally and use the ones that make accurate observations to make better videos and correct mistakes. I'm certainly not above it so again thanks for this :) Danielle
@johnvictorangeles3289
@johnvictorangeles3289 Жыл бұрын
They're blown into smithereens to oblivion😟😟😟😟
@richardwentzel8941
@richardwentzel8941 Жыл бұрын
Man i wish i had more money than sense right. The 77 year old dude knew better thers no way he didn't. He should have kicked Suleman out tho. They all should have. POW
@deathgrinderb3284
@deathgrinderb3284 Жыл бұрын
i thought there was no titanium in this sub.
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi deathgrinderb! Good morning, the sub (as I understand it) was made of carbon fiber and had titanium endcaps
@deathgrinderb3284
@deathgrinderb3284 Жыл бұрын
@@lucidmed3343 cool great video.
@zaheeraftab3208
@zaheeraftab3208 Жыл бұрын
nothing happened to body
@Nisie23
@Nisie23 Жыл бұрын
"Nice" stethoscope prop. Nice try.
@rickyabrea422
@rickyabrea422 Жыл бұрын
Im not listening to youre explaination im just watching you because you look like a goddess you are so beautiful😅
@gerryscully9248
@gerryscully9248 Жыл бұрын
Lose the botox
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi Gerryscully! Thank you for commenting. lol You guys (girls?) always give me a smile Danielle
@russellcookson2962
@russellcookson2962 Жыл бұрын
Some one should have told them all this
@russellcookson2962
@russellcookson2962 Жыл бұрын
Hope you're ribs get better mate
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi russellcookson! Thank you :) It's gonna be a haul...probably at least another 6 weeks of trying not to sneeze and crying when I get out of bed lol Danielle
@eleveneleven9033
@eleveneleven9033 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the clear and concise explanation of what happens in a case like this. It’s so gruesome and I truly hope it was as fast as you say it was. I can’t possibly imagine.
@TNitroH
@TNitroH Жыл бұрын
This was the 14th dive. First of 2023. 6 in 2021 and 7 in 2022. Decompress not required of the occupants due to the one atmosphere inside at all times.
@thomaspick4123
@thomaspick4123 Жыл бұрын
Use remote vehicles to explore. No need to put human lives at risk. People applaud the explorers as brave. It think of it as foolhardy. When Japan and Germany experimented on humans during World War 2, we were told how bad that was. I would venture to say all these explorers are not Christians. What is the purpose of this nonsense? Life is precious and to be protected. It is easy to lose one’s life. Take precautions to protect your life, not put it at risk.
@railwayjade
@railwayjade Жыл бұрын
It is sad what happened, but I think perhaps a consolation that it was over quickly. For me personally, I would hate to have my air running out or water rising and there is nothing I can do - sort of a slow death. Having said that, I never have and never want to climb into a submersible of any type
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hey railwayjade! I'm 100% with you on that one. I mean it takes these kinds of people with this vision to push humanity forward but I'll have no problem giving up my seat in this case. Through this I've thought I'm sure the first few voyages to parts unknown by early settlers was considered just as crazy...the Wright Bro's etc...all crazy...but we've benefitted. Different times we're in (clearly). Thanks for commenting and hope you have an awesome day Danielle
@railwayjade
@railwayjade Жыл бұрын
@@lucidmed3343 I absolutely agree with you on that. I mean people used to believe travelling at 30 mph with a train was bad for you, so we definitely need these brave people to push us forward. It's interesting that it is said, we know more about space than the ocean! Having said that, let us hope we have all learned from this and do better next time.
@corychallice7705
@corychallice7705 Жыл бұрын
The water wouldn't be coming in slowly at that depth and pressure even a pinhole
@corychallice7705
@corychallice7705 Жыл бұрын
@@railwayjade "we" already knew better . He was told numerous times that carbon fiber is not for repeated dives to extreme depth by many professionals. He chose to ignore them and proceed to murder 4 people. Nothing was "learned" or "discovered" by this except how money makes people do stupid things
@AmberC62606
@AmberC62606 Жыл бұрын
Facts. Never
@terrance2705
@terrance2705 Жыл бұрын
How do fish live in that much pressure?? and a sub can't go that deep a fish is weaker that a Iron sub🤷🏿
@rottsandspots
@rottsandspots Жыл бұрын
A good question! I believe it's only invertebrates and bacteria etc that can go down that far - So no bones to compress, and with no bones no tendons or ligaments to rip. Just essentially bags of water, probably born at that depth as so adapted to it, that just stay there.
@mr.garlicman3134
@mr.garlicman3134 Жыл бұрын
Oh sweetheart I am so sorry that you broke your ribs. I will pray for you and ask God to help you heal your ribs and feel and get better fast. Also you are a very beautiful woman. The guy that date's you or marries you is a very lucky man. 😊
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi mr.garlicman! Yes, I'm still up and your sweet comment gave me the smile I needed to sleep well tonight :) Thank you ❤❤ Danielle
@mr.garlicman3134
@mr.garlicman3134 Жыл бұрын
​@lucidmed3343 your welcome sweetheart I am here for you if you need or want anything or any advice in the future always.
@tomscience274
@tomscience274 Жыл бұрын
According to Navy sources they ran out of food and ate each other.
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi Tom, don't think I didn't consider that lol...
@Sumtingwong180
@Sumtingwong180 Жыл бұрын
Would if we got it all wrong and thy felt everything and is the most painful death to happen to a human?
@oxcoma
@oxcoma Жыл бұрын
The brain cant compute for that shirt of a time , such instantaneous death is painless
@oxcoma
@oxcoma Жыл бұрын
The brain cant compute for that short of a time , such instantaneous death is painless
@pollyester6639
@pollyester6639 Жыл бұрын
I don’t understand the heating element. No one has explained this.
@gsprings43
@gsprings43 Жыл бұрын
can imagine they made for good eating by the scavengers
@godblessamerica7048
@godblessamerica7048 Жыл бұрын
At that depth and pressure, since a human is 70% water, when it imploded the bodies were probably vaporized and liquified instantly. For every 2.31 feet, the pressure increases by 1 P.S.I.
@iancormie9916
@iancormie9916 Жыл бұрын
At those pressures, you could also add the compressibility of water, and bone for that matter, to our grizzly analysis.
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi godblessamerica! That's how I imagine it as well. It was difficult breaking down step by step what happened and I spoke with a few MD's who I dive with and this is how we thought it best to explain. In reality...all of it happened in milliseconds and vaporization is a good descriptor. D
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
@@iancormie9916 Hi! and thanks for dropping a comment. Grizzly is another perfect descriptor...however this truly went it was over quickly which is a blessing if there's one to be found in this. D
@larrylmedina
@larrylmedina Жыл бұрын
What happens is that they were turned into human smoothies
@richardwentzel8941
@richardwentzel8941 Жыл бұрын
You better know it was done. I mean instant. POW
@corychallice7705
@corychallice7705 Жыл бұрын
First cooked 🔥 🍖 as the air is compressed than "Chum-ification"😂
@jrambo7495
@jrambo7495 Жыл бұрын
4:11 woulder? Did you mean water? wädər
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi jrambo! LOL a few people have commented on that pronunciation and I think it's most likely due to the way the sound editing makes my words weird at times. No speech impediment here :) D
@10Haille
@10Haille Жыл бұрын
I in joyed the video thanks oh yes she is very Cute🌹🌹🌺🌺😄😄
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi 10Haille! Thank you ❤❤ D
@SGTSnakeUSMC
@SGTSnakeUSMC Жыл бұрын
PSI is "pounds per square inch" not "pressure per square inch".
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hu SGT! Yes, I'm aware and have addressed this in several comments. Thanks for reaching out though. When recording these videos at all hours of the night occasionally I substitute words and don't catch it until way after editing and upload but thanks for the correction. D
@SGTSnakeUSMC
@SGTSnakeUSMC Жыл бұрын
@@lucidmed3343 Totally understand, no disrespect intended. Great video and info. Thanks for your time to create this!
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
@@SGTSnakeUSMC I appreciate you saying that...truly it means a lot that you thought so. D
@MarTinQuality
@MarTinQuality Жыл бұрын
I like you❤
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hey GFT! Thanks for commenting...I like you as well ;) D
@jeffreyknight3884
@jeffreyknight3884 Жыл бұрын
This is very interesting to hear what happens to the human body under pressure. I'll just stay on land, if God wanted me to go diving in the ocean at these depths. He would have given me gills.
@lisamaitland157
@lisamaitland157 Жыл бұрын
Problem is a submersible has a shelf life of only 4-6 dives at extreme depths near it's own crush levels. No amount of repairing will insure safety after a certain amount of drops. James Camron even knew this, he used 4 deep submersibles and 4 DSRV's. If you were to make a business out of this, you would have to charge almost 1.5-2.5 million. This would cover the cost of full repairs and replacement for a new cheap submersible. You don't get to keep using the same submersible forever. Titan only made 6 trips to titanic, Titan averaged 3 trips per year from mid 2021 to it's death. So 6 maybe 7 trips, that exceeds repair levels, and needs to be replaced. if he was certified, he would have been notified about every part needing to be replaced not fixed. "times up on your submersible" = buy a new one. Or if you want one that can reach 36,000ft and you have 48 million$ = newatlas.com/triton-submersible-36002/56810/ That submersible is pure 3.6inch titanium, and launches by wench cable... This submersible would do titanic many times before maintenance needed. The 48million cost includes the vessel to drop the submersible, hope you know how to steer a ship.. You would have to charge 4 million per person each trip, because it's only a 2 seater. "but you could do 2 trips a day down there, and your submersible would never feel hull issues for a very long time. "due to the depth only being 125000ft and this submersible is test for 36500ft. This is what the CEO should have made his submersible out of. "and he would have to charge 2 million to 4 million, just incase repairs can no longer keep integrity of the hull.
@jimbendtsen8841
@jimbendtsen8841 Жыл бұрын
Great. This is the 39th video rehashing the same content.
@lucidmed3343
@lucidmed3343 Жыл бұрын
Hi Jim! Thanks for commenting...In reality it's probably the millionth video rehashing the same content :) Danielle
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