Comment by sebazzz
7 years ago
If helium is small enough to get in a watertight phone, it is certainly small enough to dissipate in a probably not so watertight building.
7 years ago
If helium is small enough to get in a watertight phone, it is certainly small enough to dissipate in a probably not so watertight building.
Quenching MRI magnets can suffocate people in the room they quench, and potentially the entire floor. I don’t know about a whole building, but just because something can dissipate doesn’t mean it can’t do damage in the meantime.
Not true - the whole point of burst discs etc in MRIs is so that if a quench happens, the patients and any technicians in the room survive
Venting even a full MRI's worth of LHe (~1500l) as most will make you a little lightheaded for a few minutes
The risk of death from quench events is effectively non-existent