Someone i know that is pregnant is interested in going for a local ride, shes about 8 weeks along, is it safe to have her fly?
Someone i know that is pregnant is interested in going for a local ride, shes about 8 weeks along, is it safe to have her fly?
Keep her away from 100ll
8 weeks is nothing. a near term pregnancy is a little more trouble. but nothing about the flying affects pregnant women.
Unless she has an issue her doc would have warned her about go ahead. I usually try to keep pregnant women at a density altitude below 9000' or give them supplemental O2.
Why do you care what the DA is?
In your lungs, the temperature is always 98.6 F and the humidity is always 100%. People aren't air-cooled engines, and they react only to the pressure altitude.
Use whatever you want, my standard T/O brief calculation uses Density Altitude correction so I use that as the determining factor altitude for whatever. Since the difference, physiologically, between using PA and DA is as you point out, nothing, I am completely safe to use that number.
Yea, if she is already pregnant you are not likely to get her pregnant again so safe as it is gonna get.
It does make a difference, and it will be in the wrong direction on a cold day.
Humans don't feel DA because they are temperature regulated. They make the DA into PA. Breathing is controlled from inside, so you get the same amount of oxygen per breath at 10,000 pressure altitude when it's 90 deg or when it's -40.
Using DA is really important for your airplane. It's wrong for your passengers.
Except it isn't nothing. PA, and only PA, is the determining factor for the need for supplemental O2 in an unpressurized aircraft. If you are at a PA where you don't need O2, you can run the temp up as high as you like and it won't change your need for supplemental O2 even though the DA runs way up. Likewise, if the PA is high enough to require it, cooling the air to lower DA won't obviate that need. Ask any aviation physiologist or see any FAA reference.Since the difference, physiologically, between using PA and DA is as you point out, nothing,...
I had an instrument student who flew her 182 over the Cascades when she was eight months pregnant....with her doc's approval, I assume.
Bob Gardner
Except it isn't nothing. PA, and only PA, is the determining factor for the need for supplemental O2 in an unpressurized aircraft. If you are at a PA where you don't need O2, you can run the temp up as high as you like and it won't change your need for supplemental O2 even though the DA runs way up. Likewise, if the PA is high enough to require it, cooling the air to lower DA won't obviate that need. Ask any aviation physiologist or see any FAA reference.
Someone i know that is pregnant is interested in going for a local ride, shes about 8 weeks along, is it safe to have her fly?
So can anyone tell me WHY this is? The air you breathe cannot change temperature instantly, so while cold air will be warmed (and hot air cooled) when you inhale, I don't buy the "everything's 98.6" thing. Since our lungs are a relatively fixed maximum volume, it would seem that temperature would have an effect.
Also, when I go running or otherwise exert myself physically on the ground, it's MUCH more difficult for me to breathe when it's hot and humid out than when it's cool and dry out. When it's hot I feel like I can't get enough air for a while, and it's best solved by going into a cool air-conditioned building. If DA doesn't affect us, why does this happen?
The air you breathe cannot change temperature instantly, so while cold air will be warmed (and hot air cooled) when you inhale, I don't buy the "everything's 98.6" thing.
Also, when I go running or otherwise exert myself physically on the ground, it's MUCH more difficult for me to breathe when it's hot and humid out than when it's cool and dry out. When it's hot I feel like I can't get enough air for a while, and it's best solved by going into a cool air-conditioned building. If DA doesn't affect us, why does this happen?
The air you breathe cannot change temperature instantly, so while cold air will be warmed (and hot air cooled) when you inhale, I don't buy the "everything's 98.6" thing.
Also, when I go running or otherwise exert myself physically on the ground, it's MUCH more difficult for me to breathe when it's hot and humid out than when it's cool and dry out. When it's hot I feel like I can't get enough air for a while, and it's best solved by going into a cool air-conditioned building. If DA doesn't affect us, why does this happen?
In a nutshell, the specific heat of all the fluids in and around your lungs is orders of magnitude larger than the specific heat of the air.
Isn't it also the case that even if the temperatures are unequal, a substance's diffusion across a membrane depends only on its partial pressure on each side of the membrane, rather than on the substance's density?
In a nutshell, the specific heat of all the fluids in and around your lungs is orders of magnitude larger than the specific heat of the air. In extreme cold, unprotected, you can indeed breathe in less than 98.6 air. It hurts. You'll know it.
I guess you haven't been hypoxic. You don't feel like you "aren't getting enough air." You feel fine. You just start behaving strangely, and your judgment and motor skills go to hell, not all that different from being drunk.
--snip--
And if your reply is "but most of that is due to the absolute air pressure," you're right. A more fair comparison is probably to use a more realistic air pressure -- 30 inHg. On a dry day, that's a partial pressure of oxygen of 6.28 inHg. On a wet day at 35F, that's 6.24 inHg. On a wet day at 100F, that's 5.87 inHg, or about 1,800 ft pressure altitude -- much less an issue.
The question of how fast air warms in your lungs is not the sort of thing you can evaluate by asking yourself whether you feel like "buying" it. It's the sort of question that's well within the scope of scientific knowledge, so you have to look up the known answer (and, if you're skeptical, find out how that answer was arrived at).
If you exercise when it's hot and humid, your body has trouble shedding the heat your muscles generate. So your body temperature rises, which is what you're reacting to. It has nothing to do with air density, which may be either higher or lower than average on a hot, humid day.