Jonathan_S wrote:I don't think the human body is all that vulnerable to underpressure. The top of Everest is 1/3rd standard pressure, so around 4.9 PSI, and while you need supplemental oxygen to stay up there for long the pressure in and of itself isn't a problem. And NASA uses 4.3 PSI for space suits (again at high oxygen concentrations) and originally planned to do about the same for the Apollo missions -- so they weren't worried about astronauts spending most of a week at below 1/3rd standard pressure.
Now a few minutes at 1 PSI will kill you, even with supplemental oxygen - that's the Armstrong limit where the exposed liquid in your saliva, tears, urine, and within your lungs will boil at body temperature. But even at that pressure you can survive some seconds with nothing but a weird feeing of your saliva boiling on your tongue. And a thermobaric is creating no more than a few seconds of low pressure -- and I seriously doubt it's as low as 1 PSI anyway.
Although I mainly agree with you, Cthia did not invent the scare stories about this weapon. For example, the
Economist headlined an article in 9 March 2022 with this sentence:
SINCE RUSSIA invaded Ukraine on February 24th, Ukrainian officials and human-rights organisations have raised the alarm over the possible use of thermobaric weapons or “vacuum bombs”, with horrifying accounts of how they suck the air out of victims’ lungs.
However
The Journal of Military and Veterans’ Health from Australia published this article (summary shown):
Thermobaric munitions are those munitions that, by design, produce more heat and overpressure than conventional explosives by exploding a vapour in the blast zone. Their main use initially was in airborne fuel-air explosive bombs. Whilst the United States has concentrated on airborne weapons, Russia has produced thennobaric weapons and warheads, from airborne bombs to rifle grenades.
Their medical effect is principally primary blast and they affect organs where there is a tissue interface of varying densities, such as the lungs, bowel and inner ear. Damage manifests itself in the severity and onset of occurrence, depending on distance from the blast and orientation of the victim, and can be diagnosed by simple investigative techniques.
This paper was originally written as a presentation for the Australian Military Medical Association Annual Conference in October 2001 and was displayed as a poster at the Defence Health Symposium in 2002.