This is a question about the effects of carbon dioxide on the human body, to which I hope some here might have the answer.
Now, the film, Fear Is The Key, starring Barry Newman, Ben Kingsley, 70s era. Superb car chase in it, but the scene I want to mention is near the end. (If you haven't seen the movie, and you don't wanna spoil the ending, don't read on.)
The hero and the villains are in an underwater vehicle, searching for a crashed plane. The hero screws the air system, so they're using up the oxygen, and inhaling their own carbon dioxide. (The hero's family were on the plane, and he wants to die down here, with them. The villains caused the crash, and he's decided they will join him.) So, after a while, the hero and the villains are gasping for air, panting, etc.
My guess is that the producers got it wrong. Medically, I mean. If the air is becoming too rich in carbon dioxide, what happens is that the oxygen in the blood stream drops. Of course, carbon dioxide is not poisonous, as such. Too much CO2 kills you because it displaces oxygen in your blood stream.
So the thing that's killing you is not lack of air, as such, but displacement of the oxygen in the air you're breathing, by carbon dioxide.
So, my question is this: if you're in a place where the air contains a high enough percentage of carbon dioxide to kill you, just how do you die? Gasping for breath, putting all the physical effort you can muster into trying to suck in more air, as in the movie?
Or (what I would think is more likely), do you just quietly succumb to the lack of oxygen in the blood, so that the brain quietly switches off due to lack of oxygen? - and presumably not gasping for breath?
Now, the film, Fear Is The Key, starring Barry Newman, Ben Kingsley, 70s era. Superb car chase in it, but the scene I want to mention is near the end. (If you haven't seen the movie, and you don't wanna spoil the ending, don't read on.)
The hero and the villains are in an underwater vehicle, searching for a crashed plane. The hero screws the air system, so they're using up the oxygen, and inhaling their own carbon dioxide. (The hero's family were on the plane, and he wants to die down here, with them. The villains caused the crash, and he's decided they will join him.) So, after a while, the hero and the villains are gasping for air, panting, etc.
My guess is that the producers got it wrong. Medically, I mean. If the air is becoming too rich in carbon dioxide, what happens is that the oxygen in the blood stream drops. Of course, carbon dioxide is not poisonous, as such. Too much CO2 kills you because it displaces oxygen in your blood stream.
So the thing that's killing you is not lack of air, as such, but displacement of the oxygen in the air you're breathing, by carbon dioxide.
So, my question is this: if you're in a place where the air contains a high enough percentage of carbon dioxide to kill you, just how do you die? Gasping for breath, putting all the physical effort you can muster into trying to suck in more air, as in the movie?
Or (what I would think is more likely), do you just quietly succumb to the lack of oxygen in the blood, so that the brain quietly switches off due to lack of oxygen? - and presumably not gasping for breath?