Initial thought 1: From question
Worksheet Exercise 5.2.1.4, we already have an estimate for the ISS’s total pressurized volume in SI base units. Let’s suppose that earlier we found the ISS volume to be about
\(1000\,\text{m}^3\text{.}\) If your estimate was a bit different, that is okay; Fermi problems are all about reasonable approximations. The goal here is to round to something that would be easy to do calculations with without a calculator.
Initial thought 2: To compare this to breaths, we need an estimate for the volume of air involved in a single normal breath; that is, how much your lungs expand when you inhale.
So our estimate is that it would take on the order of \(10^{6}\) normal breaths, or about one million breaths for the total lung-expansion volume to equal the pressurized interior volume of the ISS.
If you had chosen \(0.5\) liters per breath instead of \(1\) liter, you would have got about \(2 \times 10^{6}\) breaths. That is still the same order of magnitude, which is exactly what we care about in Fermi problems.
Just for fun, let’s think about how much time it would take for this to happen, afterall that is the spirit of Fermi problems. You can count how many breaths you take in about 30 seconds, then use that to estimate how many breaths you take in a minute, an hour, a day, and so on. If you take about \(12\) to \(18\) breaths per minute, we treat that is \(10^1\, \frac{\text{breath}}{min}\text{.}\) So to figure how how many breaths per day you take, we can use the conversions \(60\, \text{min} = 1\, \text{hr}\text{,}\) but in the spirit of Fermi problems, we can round that to \(10^2\, \text{min} = 1\, \text{hr}\text{,}\) likewise \(24\, \text{hr} = 1\, \text{day}\text{,}\) which we can round to \(10^1\, \text{hr} = 1\, \text{day}\text{.}\) So we have: \(10^6\, \text{breath} \left( \frac{1\, \text{min}}{10^1\, \text{breath}} \right) \left( \frac{1\, \text{hr}}{10^2\, \text{min}} \right) \left( \frac{1\, \text{day}}{10^1\, \text{hr}} \right) = 10^2\, \text{day}\text{.}\) So it would take about 100 days of continuous, normal breathing for the total expansion of your lungs to equal the entire pressurized volume of the ISS.