Defication, Urination and Projectile Vomiting as more of an implosion would occur as the fluids and Oxygen are drawn out.
Pressure differentials are a cause of structural movement. Since the human body's internal pressure is basically that of atmospheric pressure, the human body experiences no change in structure. When the human body is exposed to vacuum pressure such as in space, the human bodies pressure would exert a force greater than that of the vacuum resulting in the human body to expand...(and explode ). When submerged beneath the ocean at great depths, the human body's internal pressure would not be enough to "push" against the force of the water and would implode...
The body will not explode, explode means to burst or shatter violently and noisily as a result of rapid combustion, decomposition, excessive internal pressure, or other process, typically scattering fragments widely. The deeper and deeper you go underwater the more and more pressure there is on your body from the weight of the water above you. But answering the question that I think you are trying to ask, yes, extreme depth can harm the body and even cause death. But in most cases, excluding submarines and SCUBA diving, you would drown before the pressures of the depths would cause any harm to your body.Dr. Dave
it has more human cells actually the human body has more bacterial cells. Although it may seem more likely that the human body would have more human cells than bacterial cells. -Vasillisa
Glucose would be the gasoline for the car.
sugar/glucosePancreas is the structure in the human body that is the usual source of insulin
A human would die quickly but painfully. The body would decompress. Body fluids would boil. The eyes would explode. The thoracic cavity would expand rapidly and explode. Veins, arteries, heart, and lungs would quickly expand and explode.
It would be possible for a human body to explode if the decompression were rapid and large enough. However, under normal circumstances, vacuum would cause explosive outgassing from the lungs and capillary rupturing in the mucus membranes.
Pressure differentials are a cause of structural movement. Since the human body's internal pressure is basically that of atmospheric pressure, the human body experiences no change in structure. When the human body is exposed to vacuum pressure such as in space, the human bodies pressure would exert a force greater than that of the vacuum resulting in the human body to expand...(and explode ). When submerged beneath the ocean at great depths, the human body's internal pressure would not be enough to "push" against the force of the water and would implode...
without pressure the human body would explode, it is made for ~1 atosphere of pressure..
yes but if they are wearing a space suit
Yes, without a space suit the pressure from space will tear your body apart inside-out. You would turn into a red blob in the emptiness of space, however remarkably you would survive for a few minutes before your lungs and body fluids start to tear our own body apart. But it wouldn't take long for you to freeze or choke in that time.
He/she would suffocate, freeze, and explode due to lack of oxygen, heat, and pressure.
Yes. your body would explode in space if you went unprotected. in-fact you will explode before you can suffocate. this because in space there is a Vacume that sucks up all the air.
if a human is on the moon, without a pressurized space suit, a 28 degrees Celsius temperature would definitely boil and explode the body, because there is no environment pressure.
no your body would freeze you would suffocate and get vacuumed in to space.
Hydrogen has various functions in human body. Hydrogen can form hydrogen bond with highly electro- negative atoms.The double halix structure of DNA sustain because of hydrogen and its properties.
Because if we didn't we would proberly explode