- The submarine has 90 hours of oxygen left
- Even after coming up, the lives of the passengers will not be saved
- US and Canadian navies plus many experts
Oceangate Exploration’s Titan Submarine, which is going to reveal the wreckage of the Titanic, is still on its fourth day without a trace. The submarine went missing in the North Atlantic Ocean on Sunday. At that time, 90 hours of oxygen was left in this submarine. Meanwhile, a Russian expert has claimed that Oceangate’s Titan submarine has sunk at sea. These submarines can get stuck in mud on the sea surface, making them undetectable by radar. After this claim, the possibility of death of five people including a Pakistani billionaire aboard the Titan submarine has increased.
The search for the submarine is still ongoing
Efforts are being made on a war footing to locate the Titan submarine. In addition to US and Canadian navies, many experts are also involved in this search operation. The Oceangate exploration submarine went missing at 4am UK time on Sunday, 2000 meters above the wreckage of the Titanic. It has been four days since the submarine disappeared, and it is believed to have run out of oxygen. The submarine was at a depth of 2000 meters below the surface when it went missing. So far no trace of this submarine has been found.
The Titanic submarine is at the bottom of the ocean
Russian Navy expert Igor Kurdin believes that this submarine may be present at the bottom of the ocean. Kurdin is the chairman of the St. Petersburg Club of Submarines and a retired officer and captain of the first rank of the Russian Navy. He said that if it is no longer able to send an emergency message, it must unfortunately be assumed that it is present on the ocean floor. He said yes, its structure is solid, but not broken. It is likely that by the time he arrived the outer structure would have been depressurized and his equipment flooded.
All the passengers of the Titanic submarine are claimed dead
Meanwhile, another former submarine commander has claimed that all passengers aboard Oceangate’s Titan submarine may have died. Former commanding officer Andy Coles said the passengers may have died of hypothermia or carbon dioxide. “I don’t think the submarine has any means to expel the CO2 and re-release the air,” in which case, they would have died before completely suffocating. Second, the water below 3800 meters is incredibly cold.
Even after coming up, the lives of the passengers will not be saved
Coles said that even if the submarine reached the surface, its passengers would not be able to open the hatch, as it is locked from the inside. The submarine will have no power source or lighting system. If they have energy, they will try to drive it to the surface. Finally he said I would say that even if you find him you have less than a 50 percent chance of making him alive.