Who is on board The Titan?
Aboard the missing vessel is the CEO of OceanGate Expeditions, Stockton Rush. He was piloting the vehicle as it ventured below the depths to explore the Titanic wreckage.
Joining him is British billionaire Hamish Harding, owner of Action Aviation. He is an experienced diver, holding a Guinness World Record for spending the longest dive time traversing the deepest part of the ocean.
Before The Titanβs dive, he posted to Instagram expressing his excitement about being able to visit the Titanic after βa weather window had opened up,β allowing for the dive to proceed.
Well-known Pakistani businessman Shahzada Dawood and his 19-year-old son, Suleman, were also on board. Shahzada is the vice chairman of an investment and holding company based in Karachi.
The final passenger is French dive expert Paul Henry Nargeolet. He is the director of underwater research for RMS Titanic, Inc., a US company which owns the rights to salvage and display artefacts recovered from the famous shipwreck.
Nargeolet has led six missions to the Titanicβs wreckage site in the past and is known as an expert on the sunken vessel.
The questionable design details
Securing a spot on The Titan costs a hefty $250,000 per person β a price that explorers have been paying for trips to the Titanic seafloor since 2021.
Ironically, though, the submersible doesnβt come across as very sophisticated when looking at the details. Firstly, it reportedly does not meet standard regulations for deep dive subs.
Internet sleuths have also obtained photo and video footage of previous missions, which suggest the Titan is controlled using a $30 Logitech game controller from 2010. Itβs unclear whether this specific mission used the same controller, but surely not, when strong currents could make navigation difficult and risk crashing into a gigantic, metal shipwreck β right?
At the front of the vessel, there is located a small porthole from which passengers can look through to the undersea world. However, there is a TV monitor inside which shows more wide-scale views.
There are no seats on the Titan, requiring all passengers to sit on the floor. It is also impossible to stand when inside. It is equipped with a toilet, though, which is shielded for privacy by a drawback curtain.
Perhaps the most concerning of all, though, is that the vessel is bolted shut from the outside. Even if the vessel has returned to the surface, no one will be able to exit, get fresh air, or call for help.
If oxygen supplies run out, the group could suffocate inside the vessel despite being above water.
What is the likelihood of the Titan being found?
Experienced individuals in both the US Coast Guard and submarine building have emphasised the complex nature of this search and rescue mission.
Itβs unclear whether the vessel has resurfaced or whether it has rested on the sea floor, making it impossible to know where exactly to search. If itβs on the seafloor, the extreme depths would limit feasible options to carry out a rescue.
The weather in the area has been unpredictable with poor visibility, making plane searches difficult. High winds are making the seaβs surface choppy, and considering the Titan is painted white, experts say spotting it from the air will be βa real challenge.β
Despite this extremely complicated and intense search effort, the periodic banging sounds remain a sliver of hope that those on board are alive. With an estimated 20 hours of oxygen supplies remaining, Joe MacInnis, a veteran Titanic diver, told the CNN:
β[The banging sounds are] an indication, possibly, of human activity that is coordinated. This is the kind of thing that we hope [for]. Weβre all engaged in this kind of collective imagination, whatβs going on down there?
Weβre beset with fear and sadness and hope and uncertainty. But these sounds have given us a sense of hope. And letβs hope that we can solve this problem before the oxygen runs out. We havenβt got much time left.β