Profound Query of the Day

wikipedia said:
Strongest g-forces survived by humans
Voluntarily: Colonel John Stapp in 1954 sustained 46.2 g in a rocket sled, while conducting research on the effects of human deceleration. See Martin Voshell (2004), 'High Acceleration and the Human Body'.

Involuntarily: Formula One racing car driver David Purley survived an estimated 178 g in 1977 when he decelerated from 173 km·h−1 (108 mph) to 0 in a distance of 66 cm (26 inches) after his throttle got stuck wide open and he hit a wall.[1] http://www.hypertextbook.com/physics/mechanics/acceleration/


50G should be quite survivable, especially as the impact will be evenly spread across the body, unlike seat belts

James
 
I cba to do the maths but would 500ft be enough to reach terminal velocity?

Also I suppose a 3m of wrap (6m total diameter?) might have quite a bit of air resistance too?

Hmm too many variables, lol
 
ferretmaster said:
Your not going to be suddenly stopping completly when you hit the ground, the bubblewrap will bend on hitting the ground you will compress into the wrap gradually stopping you. Oh and you can survive falling 30000 feet without bubblewrap.


http://www.5newsonline.com/Global/story.asp?S=4234556&nav=2uEG

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/1268155.stm

I think you could survive with enough bubblewrap.

Those two links were at 50mph and at 40mph impact speed, certainly not freefall
 
malc30 said:
No because on impact your organs would smash againt your ribs etc and kill you Dead.
Rubbish tbh. How do you think stunts are done where people drop 20 or so floors. Stuntman jumps through sugarglass window and lands on a mahoosive bouncycastle-style-thingy. Another comparison is skydiving - you don't die when falling at terminal velocity, you release your chute, slowing you to almost nothing (in comparison, anyway). Bungee-jumping is the same.

If you had enough bubblewrap (a fair bit more than a metre or so I would have thought), you'd probably be fine, if a little shaken.
 
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Visage said:
Terminal velocity is about 120mph = 54 m/s

If you're surrounded by 1m of bubble wrap, you're decelrating from 54m/s to 0m/s in a space of 1m.

Thats a g force of about 145G.

You'd die, badly.
Wouldn't you need to know a time rather than a distance? You'd need to know how long it takes to go from 54m/s to 0m/s in that 1m distance.

Otherwise the material you're wrapping yourself in would make no difference.
 
cloudy said:
assuming linear deceleration and knowing the impact speed you have all the data you need...
True I suppose, you could work out the time from that.
 
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