SR-71 in flight breakup...
Discussion
following on from the SR-71 blog at the end of last year, I have just read the following. Pretty interesting..
Apologies if it has already been posted.
http://www.alexisparkinn.com/sr-71_break-up.htm
Steve
Apologies if it has already been posted.
http://www.alexisparkinn.com/sr-71_break-up.htm
Steve
Marf said:
Amazing story, but I'm confused about one part
The boiling point of a liquid drops with pressure, so the higher you go the sooner it boils. Even at 7000ft boiled water is cooler than at sea level so your tea is sBill said:
It not only supplied breathing oxygen, but also
pressurized the suit, preventing my blood from boiling at extremely
high altitudes.
Why would his blood have boiled if the suit hadnt pressurised?pressurized the suit, preventing my blood from boiling at extremely
high altitudes.

Invisible man said:
Marf said:
Amazing story, but I'm confused about one part
The boiling point of a liquid drops with pressure, so the higher you go the sooner it boils. Even at 7000ft boiled water is cooler than at sea level so your tea is sBill said:
It not only supplied breathing oxygen, but also
pressurized the suit, preventing my blood from boiling at extremely
high altitudes.
Why would his blood have boiled if the suit hadnt pressurised?pressurized the suit, preventing my blood from boiling at extremely
high altitudes.

To illustarte the point, at 7000 ft, water will boil at about 93°C but at 78800 ft where the SR-71 broke up, air is so thin and pressure so low that water will boil at a mere 15°C. Not sure of the boiling point of blood at standard atmospheric pressure, but as it is mostly water, it's likely not much different.
Now imagine that blood, ready to boil at around 15°C being in your body at 37.5°C as the pressure outside drops violently. It's like an extreme high pressure cooker suddenly bursting and all the water evaporating into steam in an instant. You can imagine the consequences aren't pretty or pleasant.
Now imagine that blood, ready to boil at around 15°C being in your body at 37.5°C as the pressure outside drops violently. It's like an extreme high pressure cooker suddenly bursting and all the water evaporating into steam in an instant. You can imagine the consequences aren't pretty or pleasant.
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