• skillissuer
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    1 year ago

    eh, not really. mountains aren’t high up enough for this to matter, there’s less oxygen at mountaintops because there’s less air there in general (less air pressure). you need to go all the way to the top of atmosphere for this effect to matter

    for example, if you release helium or hydrogen, it will eventually float up to the top of atmosphere and because it’s so light, it moves fast and at some point it will reach escape velocity and drift away into space

    • explore_broaden@midwest.social
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      1 year ago

      When they said oxygen levels go down, they presumably meant that the partial pressure goes down. That’s what people probably think of anyway since that necessitates supplemental oxygen (if you are high enough).

      • TauZero@mander.xyz
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        1 year ago

        The supplemental oxygen is needed because the total pressure is down, not because of gas separation. Humans need some number of moles of oxygen per minute, and at the top of Everest they just cannot ingest that number fast enough because the total pressure is so low. The percentage of oxygen in the total gas mixture is also lower on Everest than the 21% at sea level due to the aforementioned specific density separation, but that effect is much smaller and insignificant compared to the total pressure shortfall. This is why the grandparent comment objected to mentioning it - this is an interesting fact on its own, but irrelevant to the question of supplemental oxygen on Everest.

        • explore_broaden@midwest.social
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          1 year ago

          Yeah, on rereading I see that I originally missed the specific mention of densities causing them to separate (instead of just “less oxygen”), so I now agree with the objection.

    • angrystego@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I can’t help but think the effects are related. Isn’t low air presure in the mountains caused by gravity making air fall down?