The Terrifying First 10 Minutes Inside Titanic Underwater

On April 15, 1912, at exactly 2:20 AM, the bubbling vortex of the North Atlantic swallowed the remaining fragments of the RMS Titanic. For over a century, history books have focused on the 2 hours and 40 minutes it took for the ship to sink. But what happened during the terrifying 10-minute descent to the ocean floor? Once the ship slipped beneath the waves, a silent, apocalyptic war of deep-sea physics began. The hydrodynamic bow section, already fully flooded, leveled out and glided through the water column like a massive, 25-mile-per-hour underwater glider. But 2,000 feet behind it, the shattered stern module was entering a high-speed nightmare. Packed with sealed cabins and trapped air pockets, the stern couldn't handle the rapidly multiplying pressure. Within minutes of submerging, the back half of the Titanic literally began to implode, pancaking decks on top of each other and turning the ship inside out before it ever reached the bottom. In this video, we use fluid dynamics, structural engineering data, and deep-sea physics to reconstruct the forgotten 10 minutes inside the Titanic as it plunged into the permanent darkness of the abyss. 👇 What do you think would be the most terrifying part of the descent phase? Let us know below! #Titanic #DeepSeaPhysics #TitanicDescent #Oceanography #MaritimeHistory #TitanicWreck #FluidDynamics #HistoryDocumentary This is the AI tool behind it → https://higgsfield.ai/s/general-brigh...