• @[email protected]
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    911 months ago

    Wait, explain that to an idiot please. Could the water pressure crush a person? It wouldn’t just go up?

    • @frostwhitewolf
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      11 months ago

      Because water doesn’t compress it transfers any shockwaves straight through anybody who is in the water. This happens much faster than the water has time to move out of the way.

      Sailors who are in the water after abandoning ship during naval battles are in extreme danger of dying if a bomb goes off close by.

        • @[email protected]
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          1311 months ago

          Not exactly. The shockwave propogates directly into your body. Basically, the energy transfer liquifies your internal organs.

          • @[email protected]
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            111 months ago

            Since my answer seems to have been incorrect, can you help me understand how that’s different from being rapidly and thouroughly crushed by the water the soldier would be submersed in? The water is the medium of the shockwave, so the energy crushes you through the force propagated through the water. No?

        • @[email protected]
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          911 months ago

          For some reason my post wouldn’t post. Anyway, here’s a video demonstration https://youtu.be/W4DnuQOtA8E

          It uses balloons filled with water and air and small firecracker explosions to show how different the pressures on your body would be (especially organs like lungs, digestive tissue, which would have air/gasses in them).

          • @tswerts
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            411 months ago

            This reply thread is the information I needed from this topic 👍