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  • All right, I'll make it super fast.

  • It's me, Destin. Welcome back to SmarterEveryDay. When you're in a jet, if the

  • cabin depressurizes, they drop this little mask out of the top.

  • What happens if you're in a depressurized cabin and you're up above 15,000 feet [4,500m]

  • and you drop your mask? Something called hypoxia takes effect and you got to do

  • something about that.

  • Let's get smarter every day.

  • You've heard the flight attendants say this before,

  • Secure your own mask before helping others.” But why?

  • Why did they say that? Is the 30 seconds it takes to put

  • on a kid’s mask next to me really that important?

  • 15 years ago I learned the answer to this question when I was selected to

  • participate in NASA’s Reduced Gravity Student Flight Opportunities Program at

  • NASA’s Johnson Space Center. Before I got to ride in the Vomit Comet I had to

  • undergo physiological training in a hypobaric chamber at the neutral

  • buoyancy lab.

  • Fast forward to now. Today, astronaut Don Pettit is scheduled to renew his hypoxia

  • training certification and I asked him if it would be okay if I tagged along

  • let me swim a few laps with him over the International Space Station mock-up in

  • the neutral buoyancy lab before we headed over next door for Don’s training.

  • You look like something the dog dragged in. – I feel like it, too. The purpose

  • of hypoxia training is to let astronauts and aviators know when their brain’s

  • about to stop working correctly, which is very, very important. If youre at a high

  • altitude in an airplane, the air is thinner but the cabin is pressurized, so

  • your body gets enough oxygen to operate. To simulate cabin depressurization, NASA

  • puts its astronauts in a chamber at sea level and then pumps the air out to

  • thin it out, so that it simulates a higher altitude.

  • Don’s training starts with class work focused on understanding the specific

  • signs and symptoms of hypoxia in his own body.

  • The goal of this training is to understand your own physiological symptoms so that

  • you can take action quickly.

  • For example, Don said he experiences tunnel vision and air hunger, but I

  • remember for my training 15 years ago that get really happy and start to

  • tingle all over

  • – I can't take you seriously because this is what you look like.

  • What do you mean? I look perfectly normal. – [giggling]

  • This is the experiment we're going to do: Don and I are both going to enter the

  • hypobaric chamber at the same time and fly to FL250, at which point we are

  • going to remove our masks and start to experience the effects of hypoxia.

  • Don is the control. He’s a trained astronaut who recognizes the symptoms

  • for hypoxia and immediately corrects for them.

  • I, on the other hand, am under the direct supervision of a NASA flight surgeon and

  • after I notice the effects of hypoxia,

  • I’ve asked if I could delay for about one minute so we can better understand

  • the physiological effects of not immediately putting your mask on.

  • OK, here we go, we're getting set up.

  • While Jerry gets me situated, I’m going to talk about the two types of

  • decompression: Number one, rapid decompression this is like being inside

  • of an explosion.

  • You dump all your pressure instantly, all the moisture condenses out of the air,

  • youre suddenly in a cloud. Very scary, very violent

  • Yeah, were not going to do that. What we're going to do is simulate a slow,

  • steady leak. Were going to start at sea level and ascend at 5,000 feet [1,500m] per minute

  • all the way up to 25,000 feet [7,500m], or as aviators call it, flight level 250

  • OK, I want to make one thing abundantly clear. We performed this demonstration at

  • 25,000 feet [7,500m]. I had about three to five minutes of consciousness left.

  • However, most airliners travel at 35,000 feet [10,000m].

  • Look at this chart: There is way less oxygen up there.

  • At 35,000 feet [10,000m] you literally have seconds of useful consciousness at that altitude.

  • You can go from a normally rational person to someone so helpless you can

  • even save yourself if your life depends on it.

  • I don’t-

  • I don’t wanna die

  • I don’t tell you this to scare you. I simply want you to understand the

  • physiology behind that little preflight announcement.

  • Put your mask on first before helping others.”

  • Look, I don’t want to get too deep or philosophical with this,

  • but I think there's a neat metaphor here.

  • Sometimes it’s easy for me to see the problems in other people and focus on

  • that and I get so carried away with fixing other people that I forget that I

  • have a problem too.

  • And I think that’s what’s so cool about this demonstration.

  • Sometimes you just got to put your mask on first and get yourself sorted

  • before you can help others.

  • So thanks again for saving my life, by the way. – You're welcome, it was an honor and a pleasure.

  • It was great. – [Inaudible] all the time.

  • Thank you.

  • There you go, now we learned why you need to put your mask on first

  • before you help other people. You don’t want to get hypoxia.

  • I'm Destin

  • youre getting smarter every day, have a good one.

  • If you feel like this video earned your subscription, feel free to click this box

  • that I’m in right now or you can click the support on patreon and you'll be

  • notified via email every time I release a video.

  • I want to say thank you to the awesome people at NASA’s neutral buoyancy laboratory.

  • They kept me super safe, super informed and they educated me and made me smarter every

  • moment I was with them. That was really awesome. Thank you so much, guys

  • Anyway, I’m Destin youre getting smarter every day. Have a good one.

  • What’s the deal here, Don? – Well I cut the regular lens off of the goggles

  • OKand then I took an old pair of glasses and I cut the plastic to fit my

  • goggles and then I glued them on. – You basically MacGyvered your own goggles,

  • so that you had correction underwater.

  • That’s right. – That’s pretty good.

All right, I'll make it super fast.

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なぜあなたは最初にあなたのマスクを置く必要があります(酸素なしで私の脳) - スマート毎日157 (Why You Should Put YOUR MASK On First (My Brain Without Oxygen) - Smarter Every Day 157)

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    alex に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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