After their faces did what they did, there's no going back to normal.
Well, with that ball Arnie pulls out of his nose maybe his face is extra malleable.

After their faces did what they did, there's no going back to normal.
I'm sure they wanted Cox to look like Rodney when he was suffering, and does the air on Mars effect your tounge as well cause his tounge was swollen?
The one sci-fi show I saw to get the "What happens to you in space" thing mostly right was Farscape. The "Princess" trilogy where he expelled all air from his lungs, kept all his major orifices open and managed to get from one ship to another in vacuum. He needed reconstructive surgery afterwards, just to show you can't go through vacuum and be okay even if you follow the "expell all air" rule.
If you don't try to hold your breath, exposure to space for half a minute or so is unlikely to produce permanent injury. Holding your breath is likely to damage your lungs, something scuba divers have to watch out for when ascending, and you'll have eardrum trouble if your Eustachian tubes are badly plugged up, but theory predicts -- and animal experiments confirm -- that otherwise, exposure to vacuum causes no immediate injury. You do not explode. Your blood does not boil. You do not freeze. You do not instantly lose consciousness.
Various minor problems (sunburn, possibly "the bends", certainly some [mild, reversible, painless] swelling of skin and underlying tissue) start after ten seconds or so. At some point you lose consciousness from lack of oxygen. Injuries accumulate. After perhaps one or two minutes, you're dying. The limits are not really known.
You do not explode and your blood does not boil because of the containing effect of your skin and circulatory system. You do not instantly freeze because, although the space environment is typically very cold, heat does not transfer away from a body quickly. Loss of consciousness occurs only after the body has depleted the supply of oxygen in the blood. If your skin is exposed to direct sunlight without any protection from its intense ultraviolet radiation, you can get a very bad sunburn.
This is another thing Hollywood almost always gets wrong.But in a practical sense, space doesn't really have a temperature-- you can't measure a temperature on a vacuum, something that isn't there. The residual molecules that do exist aren't enough to have much of any effect. Space isn't "cold," it isn't "hot", it really isn't anything.
What space is, though, is a very good insulator. (In fact, vacuum is the secret behind thermos bottles.) Astronauts tend to have more problem with overheating than keeping warm.
If you were exposed to space without a spacesuit, your skin would most feel slightly cool, due to water evaporating off you skin, leading to a small amount of evaporative cooling. But you wouldn't freeze solid!
But what about radiant heat (granted it's pretty inefficent). The sun's radiant heat is powerful enough to make the 90-million mile distant planet Earth experience comfortable temperatures and to make Mercury experience temperatures as hgh as 800 degrees.
Sure, atmosphere composition plays a role, but that big ball of reacting gas has to be giving us something other than light and UV rays.![]()
Christopher, I'd be very interested to read your opinions/ideas on whether or not Quaids experiences between Rekall and the end of the movie are part of the "impant" he ordered or "really happened."
Detailed and accurate discussion of the effects of vacuum on the human body:
This is another thing Hollywood almost always gets wrong.If you were exposed to space without a spacesuit, your skin would most feel slightly cool, due to water evaporating off you skin, leading to a small amount of evaporative cooling. But you wouldn't freeze solid!
Detailed and accurate discussion of the effects of vacuum on the human body:
This is another thing Hollywood almost always gets wrong.If you were exposed to space without a spacesuit, your skin would most feel slightly cool, due to water evaporating off you skin, leading to a small amount of evaporative cooling. But you wouldn't freeze solid!
Trek gets it wrong too, then.In one of the Mirror stories - the Vanguard one, I think - a character is tortured by repeatedly being beamed out into open space (without suit) and immediately back again. With all the freezings that we always thought would happen.
LMAO at this thread.
No, but I do think the effect they used for what Mars does to you was utterly ridiculous. Almost as ridiculous as how breathing air reversed the effect on Quaid and Melina. Of course if it's all a dream then it all makes much more sense.
The "effect" is intended to be the lower air pressure effecting them it "reverses" itself only because normal airpressure eliminated to supposed stresses on the body.
It should have taken quite a bit longer for the introduction of more air into the atmosphere to have any kind of effect. Quaid and Melina would have been dead before it would have worked.
Any idea where the EXPLODING in space myth originated in Hollyweird? And which movie started that trend?
In TNG's "Disaster" they accurately depict exposure to a vaccum when Beverly and Geordi decompress the shuttlebay (to exstinguish a "plasma fire" in the room) Beverly tells Geordi that he may feel some capalaries on his skin burst and that they'd only have a few moments of useful consciousness but otherwise they'll weather the experience nicely.![]()
Apparently you are.Kohagen : "Hey I get no respect here. A thread starts about me then becomes a discussion about celluloid physics..what am I chopped liver?!?!"
Any idea where the EXPLODING in space myth originated in Hollyweird? And which movie started that trend?
As with all things in science fiction, it most likely originated in prose at least a decade or two before film and television caught up with it. It probably goes back to early pulp sci-fi stories, from back when people had no direct experience with the vacuum of space and could only speculate about its effects.
Also, it probably comes from a misinterpretation of the term "explosive decompression." We've been conditioned to make certain assumptions about what "explosive" means. It literally means that the gases inside your body or your spaceship will decompress in a single forceful burst through whatever opening is available, but we hear "explosive" and we assume it refers to something blowing up.
Here's a list of films and shows that have used the trope, and those that have averted it:
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ExplosiveDecompression
In TNG's "Disaster" they accurately depict exposure to a vaccum when Beverly and Geordi decompress the shuttlebay (to exstinguish a "plasma fire" in the room) Beverly tells Geordi that he may feel some capalaries on his skin burst and that they'd only have a few moments of useful consciousness but otherwise they'll weather the experience nicely.![]()
Except they make a critical mistake: Geordi tells Beverly to hold her breath, which is absolutely the wrong thing to do in that circumstance because you'd rupture your lungs. As a doctor, she should've known better and corrected his mistake before it killed him.
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