View Full Version : How Would a Body Die in Outer Space?
mf3201d
Mar30-09, 02:59 PM
I'm doing research for a sci-novel I'm writing.
I've read various answers to this question, but, how would a human body die in outer space if it were jetisoned from a ship, with no protective suit?
Would it freeze to death? Suffocate? Explode? All of the above?
And what's the sequence of biological events?
DaveC426913
Mar30-09, 03:18 PM
This has been discussed many times on this forum.
The victim would fall unconscious after about 30 seconds and then die of suffocation.
Here's a sci-am article that discusses the topic in detail:
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=survival-in-space-unprotected-possible&sc=WR_20080219
DaveC426913
May3-09, 09:27 PM
Under extremely low pressure air trapped in the lungs expands, tearing the tender gas-exchange tissues. This is especially grave if you are holding your breath or inhaling deeply when the pressure drops.While this is true, your lungs are no longer of any use in the few minutes you have left to live.
gabrielh
May6-09, 08:27 AM
While this is true, your lungs are no longer of any use in the few minutes you have left to live.
I've heard that your blood would essentially boil, or vaporize. Is this true?
DaveC426913
May6-09, 09:51 AM
I've heard that your blood would essentially boil, or vaporize. Is this true?
No. Your fluids are contained by your skin; they are not exposed directly to vacuum.
See also another thread: This first thing that Kills a human in Space?.
gabrielh
May6-09, 04:31 PM
No. Your fluids are contained by your skin; they are not exposed directly to vacuum.
Thank you for the clarification.
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