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10 answers

He would be completely incapable of breathing anything before the air would be too big to breath.
The amount of cells composing his body would be reduced to the point that the complexity of his organs would to to poor to process the oxygen, so think of a small mammal.
Alternatively if we are saying the cells and everything else shrink too.. then almost immediately as oxygen woud no longer be able to interact with the haemoglobin in his blood cells.

2006-10-06 03:19:31 · answer #1 · answered by blue_cabbage 2 · 2 0

If he retains the same amount of body cells, not much smaller. If we can reduce him to one cell, then probably as small as the smallest/thinnest unicellular organisms - less than one micron in diameter (taking up and giving off gases by osmosis and active transport over the cell membrane). We won't be able to call him a man anymore, though. Too small.

2006-10-06 02:14:46 · answer #2 · answered by Vango 5 · 1 0

huh? well its not like the guys lungs and the rest of his breathing apparatus organs and such wouldnt shrink too......I guess. What an odd question.

2006-10-06 02:04:48 · answer #3 · answered by welch1198 3 · 0 1

the size of an atom

2006-10-06 02:03:31 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I would say a atomic size or atom size.

2006-10-06 02:04:54 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Smaller than an atom. (Subatomic)

2006-10-06 02:05:44 · answer #6 · answered by Polo 7 · 0 0

he would have to be below 15.99 amu's (atomic mass units) which is the mass of oxygen.

2006-10-06 02:07:49 · answer #7 · answered by wingsfan_83 3 · 0 0

Depends how cold it is

2006-10-06 02:14:34 · answer #8 · answered by Andy P 3 · 0 0

You on drugs??

2006-10-06 01:58:57 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

???? wow...who the hell thinks of that...????

2006-10-06 02:04:48 · answer #10 · answered by krnsspott 5 · 0 1

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