Visit Indian Travel Sites
Goa,
Kerala,
Tamil Nadu,
Andhra Pradesh,
Delhi,
Rajasthan,
Uttar Pradesh,
Himachal Pradesh,
Assam,
Sikkim,
Madhya Pradesh,
Jammu & Kashmir
Karnataka
|
Why don’t plane windows open, asks Mitt Romney | Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney lamented the fact that airplane windows don’t roll down after wife
Ann’s plane had to make an emergency landing Friday because of an electrical malfunction. Discussing the incident at a fundraiser the next day, he said: “When you have
a fire in an aircraft, there’s no place to go, exactly, there’s no -- and you
can’t find any oxygen from outside the aircraft to get in the aircraft, because
the windows don’t open. I don’t know why they don’t do that. It’s a real problem.
So it’s very dangerous.” Here Discovery News has provided the explanation to why
they don’t do that. Gravity tends to keep air molecules concentrated near the
ground, so the atmosphere thins out as you go up. The air becomes so thin at 10,000
feet (3,000 meters) or so that airplane cabins must be pressurized above that
altitude to prevent occupants from suffering from hypoxia, or lack of oxygen.
Because temperature and pressure go hand-in-hand (i.e. low-pressure air feels
cold), pressurization is also necessary to keep cabins sufficiently warm. At 35,000
ft. (11,000 m), the typical altitude of a commercial jet, the air pressure drops
to less than a quarter of its value at sea level, and the outside temperature
drops below negative 60 degrees Fahrenheit (negative 51 degrees Celsius), according
to The Engineering Toolbox. Exposed to such conditions, you would quickly die.
Pressurization is normally achieved by pumping the cabin with “bleed air,” or
compressed air sucked in and heated up by the plane’s turbine engines. Pressurization
only works in an airtight fuselage. If you open a plane window, the compressed
air inside would rapidly rush out, atmospheric conditions inside and outside the
plane would equalize, and everybody would die.
|
|
|
|
|
|