Number 10: Airplane and spacecraft interiors are always pressurized to 1000 psi, resulting in strong winds "sucking" papers, heavy objects, and even humans out of the craft when a small hole is created in the hull. As an example, in one of the Alien sequels an alien is sucked out of a spaceship at the end thru a tiny bullet hole. Back in reality there is only a pressure difference of 1 atm between the interior and exterior of a ship in space, and even less for an aircraft. Creating a small hole would be the equivalent of turning on a good vacuum cleaner in a room and for a larger hole it would be like turning on several vacuum cleaners at the same time. Nobody is going to go flying.
Number 6 seems trivial; by the same logic the light frequency would be altered just as sound would, resulting in a complete alteration of colors during slow motion shots.
Airplane and spacecraft interiors are always pressurized to 1000 psi, resulting in strong winds "sucking" papers, heavy objects, and even humans out of the craft when a small hole is created in the hull. As an example, in one of the Alien sequels an alien is sucked out of a spaceship at the end thru a tiny bullet hole. Back in reality there is only a pressure difference of 1 atm between the interior and exterior of a ship in space, and even less for an aircraft. Creating a small hole would be the equivalent of turning on a good vacuum cleaner in a room and for a larger hole it would be like turning on several vacuum cleaners at the same time. Nobody is going to go flying.
Number 6 seems trivial; by the same logic the light frequency would be altered just as sound would, resulting in a complete alteration of colors during slow motion shots.