PDA

View Full Version : u think your xtreme??


dietwaterrr
08-26-2007, 02:51 PM
http://www.darwinawards.com/personal/personal2000-25.html
(June 1998) A letter from Michael.

My senior year of college opened with the customary research projects, grad school applications, and the like. But that all changed two months ago. Some of you may have heard rumors of some bizarre accident that I was involved in. Here is the truth, unabridged, for those who actually want to know.

In the second week of school, the society of physics students held a roughly annual welcome back party. As tradition dictates, we made our own ice cream with liquid nitrogen, 77� Kelvin, as a refrigerant and aerator. We spilled a little liquid nitrogen onto a table and watched the tiny little drops dance around. Someone asked, "Why does it do that?" That may have been the point of no return.

As is traditionally my role, I answered that the nitrogen evaporates at the surface of the table, which creates a cushion of air for the drop to sit on, and thermally insulates the drop, which minimizes further evaporation. That's why a drop dances around without boiling, without touching the table, and without spreading out like a pool of water.

Then I continued. I mentioned that the very same principle makes it possible to dip one's wet hand into molten lead, or drink liquid nitrogen without injury. I had done the latter several years earlier in a cryogenics lab, and remembered the physics of how it worked.

Naturally those around me were skeptical. "It will freeze your whole body. Remember Terminator 2?" But I was sure of myself. I had done it before, and I believed in the physics behind it. So I unhesitatingly poured myself a glass and took a shot. Simple. Swallow, blow smoke out my nose, impress everyone.

Within two seconds, I collapsed to the floor, unable to breathe or indeed do anything except feel intense pain. The ambulance arrived. The police arrived. The journey to the hospital. The attempt to explain to baffled ER staff how something like this could happen. Then I passed out.

I woke up the next morning connected to beeping machines. It turns out that, in accordance with popular belief, you really should not drink liquid nitrogen.

I subsequently learned a few things about liquid nitrogen. While you can safely hold it in your mouth and blow neat smoke patterns, you should never, ever swallow. The closed epiglottis prevents the gas from escaping, so expanding gas is forced into your body. And your esophagus naturally constricts around anything inside it, so even though there is a thin protective gas layer, the esophagus will manage to make contact with the liquid nitrogen.

I also learned that my memory was flawed. When I had done the trick six years ago, I put it into my mouth and didn't swallow. Over time, that fine line between parlor trick and fatal accident must have blurred.

I was badly burned from epiglottis to stomach bottom. The gas expanded to fill my chest cavity, and the pressure collapsed a lung. After what I'm told was a grueling all-night surgery, they removed part of my stomach and ran my entire digestive system on a machine. I was on a breather for a day until my lung was restored. There are a few considerably uglier details which I will spare you.

They were impressed with my recuperative skills. I could breathe on my own after a few days. I could sit up in bed after a week, and was walking and eating in two. At eight weeks, I'm virtually healed except for a number of unsightly scars.

And there's good news! I am the first documented medical case of a cryogenic ingestion. Read the New England Journal of Medicine. Three articles are in review now, and will be published soon.

My little adventure leaves me with the nickname Nitro-Mike, a tendency to tell bad physics jokes at department meetings, and an occasional blurb in the school paper. "Let's make Mikey drink it. Hey! Mikey likes it!"

LOL :rofl:

Freddie123
08-26-2007, 03:19 PM
LOL, love Darwin Awards

[XC] gomeler
08-26-2007, 04:45 PM
Shame he didn't kill himself.. would have been a prime darwin award candidate. Water-composed bodies + cryogenic temperatures don't combine well.

Omastar
08-26-2007, 04:49 PM
Why are people like this guy allowed to make it to senior year of college?

Cpt.Planet
08-26-2007, 05:16 PM
Lol that was just posted on another forum I visit not even a week ago.

Patriote
08-26-2007, 05:25 PM
LOL What a dumba**! I mean he drank LN2! I wouldn't even try to hold Gasoline in my mouth... Nor would i swallow and puke it...

Dynasty
08-26-2007, 08:12 PM
My little adventure leaves me with the nickname Nitro-Mike


:ROTF:

`danny
08-26-2007, 08:57 PM
Sigh being that intelligent and then drinking liquid nitrogen is mind boggling

Solarfall
08-27-2007, 12:53 AM
WOW what a incredibly stupid thing to do... lmao

naokaji
08-27-2007, 03:52 AM
i know.. some people will hate me for this statement.... but... i just have to say it...

why the :banana::banana::banana::banana: did they even bother rescuing him? all it does is inflate the cost of the medical system...
(or they should atleast make him pay 100% of the cost)

i mean if it would have been an accident.. ok.. but on purpose?

Leora
08-27-2007, 06:17 AM
I can't even comprehend what this guy was thinking when he attempted to do it... i mean anyone with any knowledge of what LN2 does would or should i say, SHOULD know better :confused: :shakes:

K404
08-27-2007, 06:31 AM
If he didnt have a clue about LN2 but had seen T2, he wouldnt have tried it. Its the gray area of partial education thats the real kicker here

teyber
08-27-2007, 10:20 AM
alright, help me ou t.

would the same principles take place, say, if you spilled it in your hand? im confuzled...

K404
08-27-2007, 10:52 AM
err...hypothetically, in very small quantities, yes.

It starts to boil off and leaves a small cushion of air between the rest of the droplet and your skin, and you can shake it off.

[XC] gomeler
08-27-2007, 02:21 PM
But a large enough quantity where gravity could overcome this cushion effect I imagine would leave you with a large amount of dead flesh. Frozen hand, it's what's for dinner.

teyber
08-27-2007, 02:40 PM
lol!
i talked to my dad about it, and he said once in a chemistry class he touched it, but why would you put it in your mouth! reminds me of this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KmzNKUg1a98

ownage
08-27-2007, 03:18 PM
Well, this could happen every Xtreme overclocker.
I know a dude (old dude), who wanted to drink some water after a while of painting his boat. He had 2 bottles of transparent colored stuff. One was water he wanted to drink, the other was some alcohol based stuff he used to remove paint from his hands. He took the wrong bottle and drunk much of it. He almost died. They needed to remove the stuff out of his stomach in the hospital.
A similar thing could also happen to 50% of us guys when overclocking with LN2 :D
Be carefull guys :p:

Alik4041
08-27-2007, 04:43 PM
Classic :ROTF:

PPInDaHouse
08-27-2007, 05:03 PM
this guy is crazy

Timbosan
08-27-2007, 06:30 PM
lol that is the definition of not thinking something through. To answer Teyber's question, a small (~5c piece) droplet can be placed in the fully opened hand without damage, however it does still feel quite cold because the evaporating nitrogen (not air as incorrectly stated in story) is very cold. If you bend you hand the skin can make contact but only briefly and the droplet will evaporate before actually freezing your skin. A drop of more volume than ~250uL risks prolonged skin contact, and subsequent damage.

max0
08-28-2007, 05:53 AM
:ROTF:

:D :rofl: :ROTF:

Monstru
08-28-2007, 10:20 AM
Now really.....I think that anybody that tries to drink LN2 will just have his mouth frozen...and probably die :)