Seconds You Could Stay in Space without Injury
(Guardians of the Galaxy Spoilers ahead)
Thereās a common misconception that exposure to the vacuum of space would cause immediate death. Guardians of the Galaxy came out last weekend and thereās one scene in which Peter Quill floats through space for some time without any protection . That scene has been getting some attention prompting James Gunn, the filmās director, to debunk the idea that weād die in just a few seconds. Thereās quite a bit of evidence there to support him too, without even having to fall back on the excuse that itās ājust a movieā.
Chief among those is the fact that it takes some time for people to lose consciousness from a lack of oxygen. Trained divers can hold their breath for minutes, and a lack of oxygen in space would knock you out, sure, but youād still have to exhaust all the oxygen thatās still in your blood. While space is famously very, very cold, thereās also nothing besides radiation to carry heat away from your body, so you wouldnāt quickly freeze either. Most people seem to think the real threat would be the lack of pressure, but even that isnāt an instant killer. Thereāve been more than a few accidents and experiments wherein mammals were exposed to hard vacuums, and they typically survive. Your circulatory system is, contrary to popular belief, a closed system. Your blood wouldnāt boil off, and you wouldnāt explode Total Recall-style. Instead, youād become something of a balloon and expand slightly. Thatās certainly not good for you, but itās survivable.
In fact, if thereās anything the film got really wrong itās that neither Gamora nor Star-lord soiled themselves. And yes, thatās totally a thing
Bottom pic: 2001, via MGM