jason drake
Member
Thanks UWSojourner, and Simon for the video talk.
So, in the interests of keeping this about the science, could I attempt to summarise some expressed points of view?
Ross thinks that integral supersaturation ( as expressed in mb of supersaturation multiplied by minutes of exposure summed for all compartments) is not a valid indicator or predictor of DCS or decompression stress because it is not directly calibrated to measured decompression stress data?
And Simon Mitchell thinks integral supersaturation is the core measure of decompression stress in successful probabilistic models and man tested deco tables and so is validated by incidence of DCS?
A question for Ross: is bubble formation dependent only on degree of supersaturation or is the exposure time relevant to bubble growth/shrinkage? How does this relate to the differing tolerance of fast and slow compartments to supersaturation?
Thanks for your time,
Jason
So, in the interests of keeping this about the science, could I attempt to summarise some expressed points of view?
Ross thinks that integral supersaturation ( as expressed in mb of supersaturation multiplied by minutes of exposure summed for all compartments) is not a valid indicator or predictor of DCS or decompression stress because it is not directly calibrated to measured decompression stress data?
And Simon Mitchell thinks integral supersaturation is the core measure of decompression stress in successful probabilistic models and man tested deco tables and so is validated by incidence of DCS?
A question for Ross: is bubble formation dependent only on degree of supersaturation or is the exposure time relevant to bubble growth/shrinkage? How does this relate to the differing tolerance of fast and slow compartments to supersaturation?
Thanks for your time,
Jason
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