Sudden decompression, 5 miles up
Dear Dr David Stern
I am a therapist at a home for fourteen abused teenaged boys. As part of their therapy they are given problems for them, as a group, to solve. A recent problem, which has generated a lot of discussion goes as follows -
A rocket ship is returning to Earth after a flight to the moon. Various things happen on the journey forcing the boys to make difficult decisions: like putting a crew member out of the airlock into space. This particular problem ended with the crew, as they reached 5 miles high running out of breathable air. What would happen if the crew opened the air lock at this point?
Would the cabin fill with air, and the ship continue to descend without problems?
Would the ship become uncontrollable and crash?
Would the crew roast in the heat from the engines?
Or would something totally different happen? If you have any enlightening thoughts on the problem, we wait with bated breath to hear them.
Reply:
Hello, Charles
What a question! At 5 miles, the air is very cold and has about 1/3 of the seal-level density. You could breathe it, but might get unconscious after a while from lack of oxygen. The question is really, how bad is the air you are breathing at this point. It probably has much more oxygen, but build-up of carbon dioxide may befuddle your mind. I don't know what to recommend, but waiting a little longer seems best.
Will the ship crash? At that point, it is probably no longer guided by its passengers. It may be descending by parachute (like moon-return capsule) or gliding down on stubby wings like the space shuttle. Opening a door will make no difference. Engines are no longer active--fuel is so precious in rocket flight that all of it is used going up.
There exists a similar question, more practical. You are flying in an airliner at 5 miles (a reasonable altitude) and suddenly a poorly secured hatch flies open. Or else, a bomb was carried aboard, and it blows a hole in the side of the cabin. What happens next?
Such things have taken place, and by all accounts they are terrifying. The air whooshes out, and if you are (say) a stewardess standing in the aisle, you may be flung to your death, though passengers strapped into their seats are likely to stay there. A moderately small hole will just cause a very rapid drop in pressure, the air will expand and cool, and since cabin air is fairly humid, the cabin will immediately fill with fog. As emergency instructions tell you, oxygen masks will automatically drop down from bins in the ceiling, helping you breathe more easily, while the pilots frantically descend to denser air.
A real big rupture could damage the integrity of the airplane. If the passenger cabin decompresses much faster than the cargo space below, or vice versa, the floor may buckle, for instance. A Turkish airliner crashed near Paris, many years ago, because a poorly secured cargo bay door came off in flight. None of the 300-odd passengers survived.
Maybe the next problem to your group will be of a happier sort!