It does make you wonder how many bar that fart was at before the expansion.You forgot you were in a drysuit, didn't you? I hate when you rip a big fart and it f's up your buoyancy
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It does make you wonder how many bar that fart was at before the expansion.You forgot you were in a drysuit, didn't you? I hate when you rip a big fart and it f's up your buoyancy
Yeah, I was wondering about that. I suppose the maximum pressure wou.d be ambient plus whatever strength your sphincter is...and when it comes out it is still at ambient. So it is all about your sphincter....so of course i asked Google AI.It does make you wonder how many bar that fart was at before the expansion.
I checked the literature. Looks like it's normally quite low, but can reach as high as .3 bar (if I've read this correctly). I'm not sure that's enough to make a noticeable difference, at least from a single event.It does make you wonder how many bar that fart was at before the expansion.
There is also a discussion on Reddit:Yeah, I was wondering about that. I suppose the maximum pressure wou.d be ambient plus whatever strength your sphincter is...and when it comes out it is still at ambient. So it is all about your sphincter....so of course i asked Google AI.
"A healthy person can generally hold a pressure between 120 and 180 mmHg during a voluntary squeeze, which involves the external anal sphincter. The internal anal sphincter, which provides resting tone, generates pressures around 60 to 80 mmHg. These are measurements taken during a manometry test, where a catheter measures the pressures generated by the anal sphincter muscles, and they are important indicators of anal sphincter function and continence."So, 180mm Hg is about 0.24bar
We need to know how much gas we are talking about. Again, Google AI:
"Fart volume varies significantly, with individual farts ranging from about 33 to 125 ml, and the total daily gas expelled can be between 476 to 1491 ml (nearly two 16-ounce soda cans) for normal individuals. This volume depends on factors like diet (especially fiber content), swallowed air, and the composition of gut bacteria, with gas production often increasing after meals."So, 125ml might produce additional buoyancy of 125g (0.28lb) at most.
At 66 ft (20m) the ambient pressure is 3 atm, call it 3 bar, so the expansion factor is just 8%, so you might get 0.26 lbs ((0.12kg) lighter.
I don't think you'd notice even a hefty fart.
You forgot you were in a drysuit, didn't you?
Does it really, though? The gas was already in you so it's just displacing outside of you and instead, inside the drysuit.You forgot you were in a drysuit, didn't you? I hate when you rip a big fart and it f's up your buoyancy
Well, if it came out, then clearly there was a pressure differential, and there would be increased displaced volume, so increased buoyancy for drysuit, decreased for wetsuit.Does it really, though? The gas was already in you so it's just displacing outside of you and instead, inside the drysuit.
Or is it a factor of compressed vs. less compressed gas? SubaBoard propeller-heads ENGAGE!