Now, the investigation has learned that Rush crashed the sub just days before it imploded, reports Sky News. Rush reportedly ...
In a new study, volcanic explosions are explored and modeled to understand the possible origins of rampart craters on Titan ...
BBC Science Editor Rebecca Morelle examines a 3D model of the doomed Titan submersible, that left all five passengers dead. Pieces from the sub ... Bronx has caused an explosion, suspending ...
OceanGate co-founder Guillermo Sohnlein, who left the company in 2013, years before OceanGate began conducting dives with the ...
But after learning the sub had imploded just hours into the dive, he said it was a comfort to know those onboard hadn’t suffered. PA Media The Titan submersible went missing during a dive to the ...
Earlier, Professor Blair Thornton from the University of Southampton said that the pressure on the Titan sub as it collapsed was comparable to the Eiffel Tower falling on it NEW YORK, June 23./ ...
The Titan submersible had been on a voyage to the ... it pushes outward as an explosion. Think of blowing up a balloon too much, and at a certain point when the material cannot take the stress ...
It is speculated that the Titan imploded following a crack in the hull of the ship, which is yet to be found. An implosion is the opposite of an explosion. It occurs when an object collapses and ...
and she was aboard Titan’s support ship last year when the sub and its… Read More Video views from the search for OceanGate’s Titan submersible show mangled components from the craft — and ...
The search for the Titan sub sparks an international rescue operation and grips public attention across the globe. Examines the race against time to try and save five people on their doomed dive ...
The US Coast Guard confirmed Thursday that debris found 1,600 feet from the bow of the Titanic belonged to the missing Titan submersible ... the opposite of an explosion. Instead of pressure ...
An curved arrow pointing right. A year after the Titan submersible imploded, killing five people, an Ohio real estate investor aims to prove that exploring Titanic-level depths is safe.