I Guess im being dumb again today, but I dont get what your saying.
We got some numbers on the left? Outside/In, that means your normal pressure in earths atmosphere? A balloon with some air in it and a quote talking about hand stretching the rubber before inflating it, im guessing this is referring to the tensile strength.
A frog, I really dont get this one that I assuming is getting ready to do a mating call.
And then the suit on the right with a fraction of psi compared to normal pressure.
But doesnt that make sense though, wouldnt you only want a fraction of pressure inside if your going in a vacuum? Then on top of that you want to compare the tensile strength of say something like very thin rubber to something like a space suit?
I Guess im being dumb again today, but I dont get what your saying.
We got some numbers on the left? Outside/In, that means your normal pressure in earths atmosphere? A balloon with some air in it and a quote talking about hand stretching the rubber before inflating it, im guessing this is referring to the tensile strength.
A frog, I really dont get this one that I assuming is getting ready to do a mating call.
And then the suit on the right with a fraction of psi compared to normal pressure.
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/PJo5Kd-4xXU
But doesnt that make sense though, wouldnt you only want a fraction of pressure inside if your going in a vacuum? Then on top of that you want to compare the tensile strength of say something like very thin rubber to something like a space suit?