Rescuers have officially announced that the Titan submersible has 'imploded' as the search robots found debris strewn across the ocean floor near the Titanic itself.
According to National World, "an implosion could occur if any part of the submersible's carbon fibre and titanium hull has suffered a small crack or fault." The implosion itself looks like a bubble created by the water's weight.
Dr David Gallo, a senior adviser with RMS Titanic Inc, the company that owns the rights to the original underwater gravesite, said the timeline suggests something happened "mid-water" that caused them to lose power or radio communications.
What happens to a submarine when it implodes?
Train Tank vacuum implosion at 1 atmospheric pressure. The depth at #Titan is around 375 atmospheres.
What happens to the human body when a submarine explodes underwater?
If a submarine implodes, it means that it collapses inwards on itself as a result of the water's high pressure, according to HITC.
The event would be catastrophic to those on board, and no one would be able to survive.
What went wrong on Titan?
Officials are not sure how quickly the vessel imploded into the dive - it may have happened right away and could be why the sub never resurfaced. Or, it may have happened after they lost communication and ended up floating in the water.
Stockton Rush, CEO of OceanGate, explained in a haunting interview that “as you’re descending, you’ve got your depth and altitude… that’s pretty critical. When you get close to the bottom, you have to be ready to drop some weight so you don’t go crashing into it, or thrust."
"So getting that notification 200 metres above the bottom is pretty critical. And then when we use our laser scanning system, we need correction data for through water speed currents and the light to keep the errors down, and that’s it, that’s the element of adding [coms] on the sub," explained the billionaire who has officially been declared deceased.
Others speculate that the material Titan was made of wasn't enough, or wasn't meant to last, as Stockton admitted to taking shortcuts there too.
“This Carbon fibre hull is a huge thing. Carbon fibre has been used for autonomous underwater vehicles before, but never anything as large as what we’re doing. Some work was done by the Navy decades ago, but it was determined that you can’t use it," says Rush.
"A lot of arguments about using carbon fibre in submersibles were the same as using [carbon fibre] in aircraft. And having built my own fibreglass plane 30 years ago, I’m still flying it, you can do it, you just have to do it right," continued Rush, in a statement that now seems poignant.