National Post

‘EXPLOSIVE DECOMPRESS­ION’ AT 32,000 FEET

- ALAN LEVIN AND RYAN BEENE Bloomberg

When even a small hole suddenly opens in a jetliner flying miles above the Earth, it unleashes hurricane-like forces. Everything that’s not strapped down flies toward the opening. The wind can easily lift a person up and out of the plane.

These terrifying episodes are rare but when they occur — such as on Tuesday when a Southwest Airlines plane lost a window at 32,500 feet, killing a woman who was partly sucked out of the cabin — they have led to grisly results.

“That’s why they call it an explosive decompress­ion,” said Nora Marshall, a former National Transporta­tion Safety Board investigat­or who specialize­d in cabin safety and accident survival. “It is extremely forceful. The differenti­al in pressure, it’s very, very significan­t.”

There have been at least a half dozen cases since the 1970s in which people were heaved out of airliners after planes suddenly lost pressure, prompting a rush of air as from a burst balloon. In a handful of extreme cases, the aircraft crashed, killing hundreds of people, after decompress­ions severed flight controls or disintegra­ted the planes.

Examples go back at least to the dawn of the jet age, when planes flying at ever higher altitudes relied on pressurize­d air in the cabin so people could breathe. Three British de Havilland Comets, the first pressurize­d civilian jet, came apart in mid-air within two years of the aircraft’s debut before engineers identified a design flaw.

“There’s a fog that comes into the cabin,” Marshall said. “Papers, bags, coats, jackets, everything will head to the breach in the fuselage.’’

If a sudden opening in the plane is large enough, it creates a violent windstorm at the point where the pressurize­d air inside the passenger cabin rushes out of the plane.

“It’s instantane­ous and it’s sustained over a period of time until the pressure inside the aircraft is equal to the pressure outside of the aircraft,” said Richard Healing, a former NTSB board member who is president of the consulting firm Air Safety Engineerin­g.

The torrent of air would be most fierce next to the opening, just like when a person puts a hand next to a vacuum cleaner nozzle, said Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology aerospace professor John Hansman.

Hansman estimated that the air flowing outside Southwest Flight 1380 on Tuesday would have generated from 800 to 1,000 pounds (363 to 454 kilograms) of force. That would have been more than enough to pull Jennifer Riordan, 43, part way out of the plane before fellow passengers could pull her back in. A medical examiner in Philadelph­ia, where the Boeing 737-700 made an emergency landing, concluded that Riordan, a vice-president at Wells Fargo & Co in Albuquerqu­e, New Mexico, died of blunt impact trauma to the head, neck and torso.

“Her seat belt was keeping her held down at the hips,” Peggy Phillips, a retired nurse who was on the flight told the New York Post. “The rest of her was outside the plane.”

The plane’s window cracked open when a fan blade on the left engine, which had been weakened by metal fatigue, broke loose and sent engine debris flying, according to investigat­ors. One clue about the power of the air blasting out the opening was released by the NTSB Wednesday: no traces of the window were found in the plane.

Aircraft manufactur­ers spent decades mastering the enormous forces created when a pressurize­d cabin flies at higher altitudes.

Those forces crippled the de Havilland Comet. Over the space of 12 months ending in 1954, three planes and their passengers and crews were lost. Investigat­ors eventually concluded that stresses from pressuriza­tion at the corner of the square windows caused their fuselages to rupture catastroph­ically.

In the case that is most similar to Tuesday’s accident, a window-seat passenger was sucked out of a National Airlines McDonnell Douglas DC10 near Albuquerqu­e in 1973. The airliner’s right engine exploded and shot debris through the passenger compartmen­t, causing the victim’s window to fly off.

According to an NTSB report, the man was pulled entirely through the roughly 16by 10.5-inch opening. He was buckled in, but the belt was fastened loosely, the agency said. A passenger sitting next to the man could not pull him back. The body wasn’t recovered for two years.

An improperly latched cargo door came off an American Airlines plane in 1972 while it was flying 11,750 feet above Ontario, with 67 people aboard, according to an NTSB report of the incident.

The loss of pressure in the cargo hold collapsed part of the cabin floor above it, injuring 11 people and damaging cables that controlled the rudder, stabilizer flaps and a rear engine, making an emergency landing in Detroit even more difficult.

 ?? MARTY MARTINEZ VIA AP ?? A photo provided by passenger Marty Martinez shows the window that was shattered on a Southwest Airlines plane.
MARTY MARTINEZ VIA AP A photo provided by passenger Marty Martinez shows the window that was shattered on a Southwest Airlines plane.

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