Acceleration and Damage
Moderator: Alyrium Denryle
Acceleration and Damage
If every part of an object is accelerated at exactly the same rate will the object become damaged in any way?
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Well, as i understand it, the forces exerted on a structure that's accelerating will eventually break it, after causing stress, as some bits are weaker than others.
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But i don't do physics, so DONT TRUST ME.
Even speheres buckle i would think.
But i don't do physics, so DONT TRUST ME.
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- Kuroneko
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Re: Acceleration and Damage
No, if done uniformly enough, there will be no strain on any part of the object and thus no damage. Just think of free-fall: every particle of the object is being accelerated at the same rate (or only negligibly different), so the object does not 'feel' its own weight.Yogi wrote:If every part of an object is accelerated at exactly the same rate will the object become damaged in any way?
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The sensation you feel in your stomach is because you're accelerating along the negative y-axis and the positive x-axis at the same time. Because your stomach wants to stay at a constant velocity (the velocity at which you were travelling prior to the sudden drop), when the roller coaster car drops, it tries to stay where it is. And because the rest of you starts to accelerate, it literally does so without your innards. So they all get sloshed to the back of you as your body starts to accelerate without them.neoolong wrote:Does that relate to why your stomach feels weird when you go on a rollercoaster, but it doesn't happen when you go bungee jumping?
Bungee jumping is a bit different, because gravity isn't changing your direction. You're only accelerating in one direction: Down (along the negative y-axis). This means that ALL of your body is accelerating at the same rate, and nothing gets sloshed around because everything is constant. The moment you step from the platform, you're accelerating at -9.8 m/s^2. Make sense?
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