An airliner travels its own length in about 1/8 to 1/4 of a second, which is right about what human reaction times are. By the time you sense that impact is occurring, you are probably already dead. During a crash, the tail will, of course, be decelerating, but not by as much as might be imagined. The inertia is too much for the kind of forces needed to be transmitted back through the structure, so the structure collapses in on itself instead. I think the analysis of the video footage from 9/11 showed something like a half a second.Hi,
Very unfortunate tragedy. It is almost unbelievable that this could happen in this day of computer modeling and such, but humans will be human and that means making stupid decisions sometimes.
My view of extreme pressure on an asymmetrical and inhomogeneous object like the eyeball is that it would deform violently. This would be due to a pressure differential not the outside pressure itself. The water may only compress by 1 percent, but the structure holding it would break down.
The only good thing we can say about this I think is that it happened so fast that they literally had no idea it was happening.
A pseudo good thing is that this may have taught future developers to consider safety more aggressively.
It's hard to think about this, but I've also thought about the time it takes for a large jet airliner to crash into something. Given the speed of the plane could be 500 mph, how long is it between the time the nose hits until the tail hits. That's also pretty gruesome.
