• dingus@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    15 days ago

    I’m confused though. Don’t people use this to talk about how small things like bugs can fall from a large height and be uninjured, but large things like a human or elephant will be injured if falling from a height? I feel like what you’re saying is backwards to what the internet has told me.

    • Apollo42@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      7
      ·
      15 days ago

      The person you replied to only spoke about sudden change in temperature, not falling from height.

    • _bcron_@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      5
      ·
      edit-2
      15 days ago

      No, it’s all the same in that regard - a ladybug will have a far higher surface area to volume/mass, and that affects terminal velocity.

      Ladybug might have 10 square millimeters and weigh .05 grams, 200 square millimeters per gram

      Elephant might have 15 square meters and weigh 5000 kilograms. 15 million square millimeters and 5 million grams, so 3 square millimeters per gram

      But the elephant in the room (slaps knee) is momentum.

      Let’s say, hypothetically, we shove a ladybug and an elephant off a 125m cliff and pretend they both have a ridiculously high terminal velocity. That’s enough for them to reach 50 meters per second or 180kph. .05 gram ladybug’s momentum would be an infinitessimally small 2.5 kg·m/s, meanwhile the elephant is at 250000 kg·m/s, and the elephant explodes.

      The thing that makes the ladybug survive the fall (ridiculously low mass relative to surface area) is the same thing that would make a ladybug freeze in minutes if you tossed it in a freezer. Conversely, elephant wouldn’t really be bothered by a couple minutes in a freezer.

      It’s that rapid change in internal body temperature that stresses smaller fish out, dumping them in water that is much colder or warmer than them