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That is interesting about liquid breathing. So, can an ordinary fish withstand higher G-Forces than a human?It might be possible to put a person on a heart/lung bypass machine, then fill the lungs with water or some other liquid. No doubt it would generate a strong cough reaction, so one would probably have to heavily sedate the person.One might be able to artificially change the blood pressure too.I'm sure there is still an acceleration limit, as nothing is completely homogeneous for density.
Reaserch has produced some success with lower mammals and very premature babies but they have yet to come up with a fluid capable of the necessary exchange rates of oxygen and CO2 to support an adult human more than briefly and adult lungs then react badly to being flooded when the fluid is removed.
Perfluorocarbon seems to be used with some success. Reports I've read indicate one problem is higher viscosity than air which means breathing is hard work and rib stress fractures have been reported.
Quote from: Colin2B on 13/03/2017 10:14:45Perfluorocarbon seems to be used with some success. Reports I've read indicate one problem is higher viscosity than air which means breathing is hard work and rib stress fractures have been reported. It is quite possible that with high G-Forces, one wouldn't be able to expand and contract the rib cage anyway. One could, of course, aid breathing with a pump, perhaps driven by natural nerve/electrical impulses to the diaphragm.How would extreme G-Forces affect the heart? Blood vessels? Could the shape of the major heart valves change enough to cause problems?Looking at deep SCUBA dives, the body seems to tolerate the pressures reasonably well, other than correcting for breathing (and various breathing and gas related issues). Perhaps that would be another thing one could try. So, with the tank idea, what would happen if one pressurized it to say 50 ATMs while accelerating? Would that improve the ability for breathing and gas exchange?
Presumably just like with saturation diving if they stay under pressure long enough there will be a decompression period necessary after such long exposures.
Quote from: WildRose on 16/03/2017 07:55:17Presumably just like with saturation diving if they stay under pressure long enough there will be a decompression period necessary after such long exposures.As you probably know one of the limitations for scuba diving is nitrogen which saturates body tissues which then comes out of solution on ascent to form damaging bubbles. Also at depths below 40m in sea water nitrogen becomes a narcotic causing hallucinations and risk of death due to disorientation. Perfluorocarbon avoids nitrogen narcosis as it replaces nitrogen as the carrier of O2 and CO2, this also means there should be no need for extended decompression other than to equalise pressure in body cavities.Unfortunately at partial pressures of >0.45ata O2 becomes toxic, although it might require exposures of many hours to a few days, but for pO2 > 1.6ata brain toxicity can occur within minutes to hours and this occurs at a depth of 66m in sea water which is a pressure of 7.6ata with a breathing gas containing 21% O2. If I remember correctly the toxicity is due to the compressed O2 molecules now being so close together that they collide with each other forming oxygen radicals which do the actual damage. Fluids are relatively incompressible so the O2 molecules should not be forced closer together, but I'm not sure whether this is true when the O2 is in tissue subject to the higher pressureThe other problem might be air in various body cavities e.g. stomach and gut, this gets compressed and could cause surrounding tissue to stretch. It's certainly an issue if the pressure doesn't equalise slowly on ascent.
Humans cannot, in general withstand high acceleration very well. The main problem is that the blood tends accumulate in the direction opposite to that of the acceleration. This is for instance the limiting factor when designing fighter jets, in that there is no use making one that can turn so sharply that the pilot would black out due to the acceleration. However, it a person is submerged in a tank of water (or some other liquid with a density close to that of human tissue) accelerating the whole tank would not put a lot of strain of the person inside, since the force would be evenly distributed as a pressure gradient in the liquid. The blood would no longer tend accumulate in the direction opposite to that of the acceleration.So, how many G-forces (how many times the Earths gravitational acceleration) could a person in a water tank withstand? Ten times Earth gravity? A hundred times Earth gravity? Could you envisage shooting someone into space using a cannon, as Jules Verne proposed for going to the moon? The limiting factor is likely to be forces on the air we have in our lungs, nose, ears etc. - that like air bubbles will want to rise up through the pressure gradient. If the gradient is too strong they could rip through human tissue. But the question is how high the acceleration would have to be for this (or some other damage) to happen...
We can only overcome the problem if we could apply a force globally throughout an object rather than locally at a surface.
This then raises a question. In free-fall a human undergoes acceleration but does not feel the force. Therefore both brain and blood flow would only become a problem due to extreme tidal forces. We can only overcome the problem if we could apply a force globally throughout an object rather than locally at a surface.