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Amazing Cat Survives 26-Story Fall
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Amazing Cat Survives 26-Story Fall |
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Sounds suspicious to me...maybe someone wanted to make a video that got a lot of hits and cruelty was just part of the production value...
I'm not sure but sounds wierd to me.
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I mean how did they know it would fall? And at 60 mph how long does it take a cat to fall 26 stories, like 25 seconds tops?
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Yeah, it's Monday.
06/01/09
I am constantly in awe of the feline's grace and poise. They jump four or five feet from the floor to the window ledge, and it gets me every time. But I was raised around clumsy, bumbling dogs (who I still love).
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Early morning, she wakes up
Fall, fall, fall out the window
It's time for landing, on the ground
It's you they're all waiting for
They go…
"Isn't she lovely, this amazing cat?"
And they say…
[CHORUS:]
She's so lucky, she's a cat
But she falls, falls, falls out her tall window
If there's nothing left of her nine lives
Then why did she make it alright?
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Oh here it is:
A cat reaches its terminal velocity of 60 mph within 5 stories of freefall. For comparison, a person's terminal velocity is 120 mph.
Once a cat reaches its terminal velocity, it then begins to slow down. This is because the cat relaxes, changing its position from back arched, head down, and legs pulled tightly underneath its body, to resemble a spread eagle cat. This increases its cross-sectional area and slows the cat down. The reason for this is that our bodies are only sensitive to acceleration (this is why at times on an airplane flight it feels as if you aren't moving at all). Relaxing also causes the impact force to be spread out over more area when the cat lands, resulting in a decrease in injuries to cats' limbs when they fall seven or more stories.
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On Earth, falling objects reach a terminal velocity, as air resistance and gravity reach equilibrium.
These falling objects include cats, of course. In the phase before terminal velocity, cats are actually balled up. Once they reach terminal velocity, however, they can spread out and relax. A cat's body has a natural sense of balance, allowing it to land on it's padded feet, which soften the jarring feeling.
When cats jump from 7-8 stories, there is not enough time or height for the felines to attain terminal velocity--they are still in panic mode...and so they are still curled up and in a very dangerous position. Of course, if you map this with height vs. deaths, you'll find that while a cats' deaths may increase with a decrease of height, there a point where the lower height will not result in a higher chance of death, because such a height is relatively close to the ground, and would not induce panic within a cat.
I had a physics teacher that taught us this and sort of proved it to us in class. It was glorious. XD
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[www.scribd.com]
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