Southwest Airlines jet If a sudden opening in the plane is large enough, it creates a violent windstorm at the point where the pressurized air inside the passenger cabin rushes out of the plane. (Photo: Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) – When even a small hole suddenly opens in a jetliner flying miles above the Earth, it unleashes hurricane-like forces. Everything that's not strapped down flies toward the opening. The wind can easily lift a person up and out of the plane.

These terrifying episodes are rare but when the occur — such as on Tuesday when a Southwest Airlines Co. plane lost a window at 32,500 feet, killing a woman who was partly sucked out of the cabin — they have led to grisly results.

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