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- Newsgroups: sci.physics
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!ucla-cs!ucla-ma!news
- From: barry@arnold.math.ucla.edu (Barry Merriman)
- Subject: Re: How does Superman create thrust?
- Message-ID: <1992Dec13.003302.15934@math.ucla.edu>
- Sender: news@math.ucla.edu
- Organization: UCLA, Mathematics Department
- References: <1992Dec12.020237.11768@nuscc.nus.sg>
- Date: Sun, 13 Dec 92 00:33:02 GMT
- Lines: 29
-
- He doesn't make thrust, he simply jumps (and then glides
- when he reaches cruising altitude---that cape's gotta be a
- real "drag", though).
-
- The real question is why his feet don't punch through the pavement
- when he exerts his tremendous launching force. Assuming he
- can jump about 1km high, and weighs 100kg, his jump imparts
- him with m g h = 100 x 10 x 1000 Joules = 1,000,000 Joules of energy
- (this is about the energy content of a large meal---he must be
- hungry afterwards.) If this energy were imparted over a 1 meter
- distance as he crouches and springs from the ground, the force
- exerted would be around (from F . d = W) F = 1,000,000 J/ 1m = 1,000,000 N.
- That's about a 250,000 lb force, and applied by the soles of his feet,
- which have an area of about 100 inch^2, we get a pressure exerted by his
- feet on the ground of 2,500 lb/in^2. In terms of atmosperic pressure,
- thats close to 200 atmospheres of pressure! This pressure is applied
- for a fraction of a second, which is long enough to damage the surface.
- Certainly on soil his feet would punch right through if he tried
- to take off in this manner. Even on concrete, he should punch through.
-
- So why isn't NY covered superman's foot prints.
-
- --
- Barry Merriman
- UCLA Dept. of Math
- UCLA Inst. for Fusion and Plasma Research
- barry@math.ucla.edu (Internet; NeXTMail is welcome)
-
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-