Originally posted by Mich the Tester
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Previously on "Somebody’s about to jump off the building"
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Originally posted by DaveB View Post
My grandad worked on the railways for years, he was deputy station master at Paddington in the late 60's.
One of his jobs, along with kicking in the doors of toilet cubicles and dragging out the junkies who'd od'd in there, was helping recover the bodies after a "one under". By the time the trains had finished with them they came out in chunks, not entirely dissimilar to the large vacuum packed joints you get in a supermarket.
Two trains came past at full speed in opposite directions with the firemen standing in the gap in between the tracks.
Same result apparently.Last edited by Sysman; 31 March 2010, 16:36.
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Originally posted by doodab View PostAh I see. Is this because lower temperature = higher density or is it more complex than that?
"An analysis based on conservation of mass and momentum shows that the speed of sound a is equal to the square root of the ratio of specific heats g times the gas constant R times the temperature T.
a = sqrt [g * R * T] "
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Originally posted by Churchill View PostOh FFS.
Ok, here we go.
I was referencing the bloke who was going to attempt the highest freefall jump. It was estimated that he would break the sound barrier on his way down.
Doodab obviously understand what I meant.
SY01, stick to wringing your hands like a fairy as your project turns to ratsh!t.
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Originally posted by Gibbon View PostWrong. Speed of sound decreases with height due to lowering temperature, until you hit a temperature inversion higher up.
I know this as I have travelled through the sound barrier.
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Originally posted by suityou01 View Postthat is what supersonic means.
HTH
Ok, here we go.
I was referencing the bloke who was going to attempt the highest freefall jump. It was estimated that he would break the sound barrier on his way down.
Doodab obviously understand what I meant.
SY01, stick to wringing your hands like a fairy as your project turns to ratsh!t.
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Originally posted by doodab View PostAt terminal velocity, the drag force is by definition equal to the gravitational force. Gravity is slightly weaker at altitude because you are further from the earth, but at those sorts of heights it's not going to be that much weaker and the lower air density would dominate.
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Originally posted by doodab View PostApparently not. Of course the speed of sound increases with the decreasing air density so it's quite a bit higher at altitude.
http://www.newscientist.com/article/...-freefall.html
I know this as I have travelled through the sound barrier.
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Originally posted by Churchill View PostDid that chap break the sound barrier?
http://www.newscientist.com/article/...-freefall.html
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Originally posted by zeitghostIndeed.
Terminal velocity can be supersonic if you're high enough up.
As in falling from a balloon at 100,000ft*.
*don't try this at home.
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Originally posted by TimberWolf View PostSeems unlikely to me, but I suppose there is an outside chance your limbs might shake off. Your terminal velocity would of course be lower than "hundreds of miles an hour" at lower altitudes, and at higher elevations would be greater because the atmosphere is thinner, but drag forces would also be less at height and I can't be arsed to do the calculations.
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