for alex. we re just a few point feet apart, getting ready for my own show, and all of a sudden you re swearing on television. [laughter] just to be clear, i m quoting. i m a journalist. people say it. i quote it, i let you decide whether it s appropriate. they re not my words. the use mentioned distinction is what we used to say in linguistic philosophy in my college years, important year. you re reporting marjorie taylor. i remember when we are talking about donald trump having sworn in at some point you just had to say the words that he said on tv. there are a lot of firsts for me for the last few years, but that was fun. don t you always i have not arrived at a consistent policy on this, because it is ludicrous either way. it is ludicrous when you actually say it, because it s silly. it is also ludicrous where you re like, he called her a b word. every part of this is a little surreal. you woke me, up you got me ready for the show. thank, you my friend, have a
we have got ten hours, ten hours is about how much breathable air time the u.s. coast guard estimates is live for the five men aboard the missing submersible which is named the titan, to begin its a descent to the wreckage of the titanic on sunday morning. the clock is tipping rapidly, as the coast guard has an incredibly complex search and rescue operation too find them in an area that is twice the size of connecticut in two and a half miles below sea level. multiple countries and government agencies are involved in the canadian effort, a bohemian research vessel, a french research vessel. a u.s. navy, and the air national guard. remote operated vessels are also being deployed in the search, and more ships are expected to be arriving in the next 24 hours. that is where things stand right now. as you can see the moving on is tracking map, as many as 11 ships were spotted today heading towards the location of the titanic wreckage in a remote part of the north atlantic ocean.
they re down there, and they are going to be found sometime soon. what if they got? in the submarine itself, or on the ship? the submarine itself. they don t i mean, oxygen is the important stuff. obviously, after four days, water becomes problematic. food is probably not going to be particularly problematic. i could go up a couple days without food standing on my head. you know, they take down lunch, they take down water with them. so, obviously this is a crew that is gonna be very intelligent and know they are going to conserve their resources and make them last. they knew well they had four days of oxygen, although you don t know what that really means, right? these are estimates. and just guidelines, right, you re going to have co2 buildup along the way. and who knows how that will affect different people at different points. so, they have provisions, so, for them they will be cool down
they take down water with them. so, obviously this is a crew that is gonna be very intelligent and know they are going to conserve their resources and make them last. they knew well they had four days of oxygen, although you don t know what that really means, right? these are estimates. and just guidelines, right, you re going to have co2 buildup along the way. and who knows how that will affect different people at different points. so, they have provisions, so, for them they will be cool down there as well. the temperature down outside at the bottom would be 28, 29 degrees fahrenheit. and they have layers, but they definitely are going to be in the dark and they re going to be layered up. and will probably be huddled together to try and maintain warmth. but this is a crew that would be smart enough to know how to do that kind of thing. you look at ph, he s been submarines for 60 years. so, no one else has the level experience this guy does. and there is a way they can manage this as a
have flown it to canada, it s getting ready to be loaded onto a ship and moved on to the potential crash site. so, they can use that crane to pull the vehicle up out of the water, the same way we would pull an f-18 fighter that falls into the ocean and drops to the bottom. so, you can definitely pull it out with this crane, but you have to locate it pretty precisely first. one of the things we are talking about is the amount of oxygen that is in that vessel. how are those estimates made? and how do we understand because there s a range, obviously, of how long they can survive underwater. yeah, so we have some standard factors that used based on people, how much oxygen the use, and more importantly, how much carbon dioxide they generate, because that s usually the problem, you tend to suffocate due to carbon dioxide poisoning rather than just running out of oxygen. so, you do those numbers, and with five people in the craft and the amount of space that is their, and they do hasn t