If superpowers were real Super speed Joy Lin

Some superheros can move
faster than the wind.

The men in Apollo 10 reached

a record-breaking speed

of around 25,000 miles per hour

when the shuttle re-entered

the Earth’s atmosphere in 1969.

Wouldn’t we save a lot of time

to be able to move that fast?

But what’s the catch?

Air is not empty.

Elements like oxygen and nitrogen,

even countless dust particles,

make up the air around us.

When we move past these things in the air,

we’re rubbing against them

and creating a lot of friction,

which results in heat.

Just like rubbing your hands
together warms them up

or rubbing two sticks together makes fire,

the faster objects rub together,

the more heat is generated.

So, if we’re running
at 25,000 miles per hour,

the heat from friction
would burn our faces off.

Even if we somehow withstood the heat,

the sand and dirt in the air

would still scrape us up

with millions of tiny cuts

all happening at the same time.

Ever seen the front bumper
or grill of a truck?

What do you think all the birds
and bugs would do

to your open eyes or exposed skin?

Okay, so you’ll wear a mask

to avoid destroying your face.

But what about people in buildings

between you and your destination?

It takes us approximately
one-fifth of a second

to react to what we see.

By the time we see what is ahead of us

and react to it -

time times velocity equals distance

equals one-fifth of a second

times 25,000 miles per hour

equals 1.4 miles

  • we would have gone past it

or through it by over a mile.

We’re either going to kill ourselves

by crashing into the nearest
wall at super speed

or, worse, if we’re indestructible,

we’ve essentially turned
our bodies into missiles

that destroy everything in our path.

So, long distance travel
at 25,000 miles per hour

would leave us burning up,

covered in bugs,

and leaves no time to react.

What about short bursts

to a location we can see

with no obstacles in between?

Okay, let’s say a bullet

is about to hit a beautiful
damsel in distress.

So, our hero swoops in at super speed,

grabs her,

and carries her to safety.

That sounds very romantic,

but, in reality, that girl
will probably suffer

more damage from the hero than the bullet

if he moved her at super speed.

Newton’s First Law of Motion
deals with inertia,

which is the resistance to a change

in its state of motion.

So, an object will continue moving

or staying at the same place

unless something changes it.

Acceleration is the rate
the velocity changes over time.

When the girl at rest,

velocity equals zero miles per hour,

begins accelerating to reach
the speed within seconds,

velocity increases rapidly

to 25,000 miles per hour,

her brain would crash
into the side of her skull.

And, when she stops suddenly,

velocity decreases rapidly
back to zero miles per hour,

her brain would crash
into the other side of her skull,

turning her brain into mush.

The brain is too fragile
to handle the sudden movement.

So is every part of her
body, for that matter.

Remember, it’s not the speed
that causes the damage

because the astronauts survived Apollo 10,

it’s the acceleration

or sudden stop

that causes our internal organs

to crash into the front of our bodies

the way we move forward in a bus

when the driver slams on the brakes.

What the hero did to the girl

is mathematically the same
as running her over

with a space shuttle at maximum speed.

She probably died instantly
at the point of impact.

He’s going to owe this poor
girl’s family an apology

and a big fat compensation check.

Oh, and possibly face jail time.

Doctors have to carry liability insurance

just in case they make a mistake
and hurt their patients.

I wonder how much superhero
insurance policy would cost.

Now, which superpower physics lesson

will you explore next?

Shifting body size and content,

super speed,

flight,

super strength,

immortality,

and

invisibility.

一些超级英雄的移动
速度比风还快。 1969 年,当航天飞机重新进入地球大气层时

,阿波罗 10 号中的人达到

了创纪录

的每小时 25,000 英里的速度

我们不是可以节省大量时间

来实现如此快速的移动吗?

但是有什么问题呢?

空气不是空的。

氧气和氮气等元素,

甚至无数的尘埃颗粒,

构成了我们周围的空气。

当我们在空中经过这些东西时,

我们会与它们摩擦

并产生大量摩擦,

从而产生热量。

就像双手
搓在一起会发热,

或者两根棍子搓在一起会生火一样,

物体摩擦得越快,

产生的热量就越多。

因此,如果我们
以每小时 25,000 英里的速度奔跑,

摩擦产生的热量
会烧掉我们的脸。

即使我们以某种方式经受住了高温,

空气中的沙子和泥土

仍然会刮伤我们

,同时发生数百万个微小的伤口

见过卡车的前保险杠
或格栅吗?

你认为所有的鸟
和虫子会对

你睁开的眼睛或裸露的皮肤做什么?

好的,所以你会戴上口罩

,以免破坏你的脸。

但是你和目的地之间的建筑物里的人

呢?

我们大约需要
五分之一秒

才能对我们所看到的做出反应。

当我们看到前方的事物

并对它做出反应时——

时间乘以速度等于距离

等于五分之一秒

乘以每小时 25,000 英里

等于 1.4 英里

——我们会超过它

或通过它超过一英里。

我们要么

以超高速撞上最近的
墙壁而自杀,

要么更糟糕的是,如果我们坚不可摧,

我们实际上已经将
我们的身体变成了导弹

,摧毁了我们前进的一切。

因此,
以每小时 25,000 英里的速度进行长途旅行

会让我们燃烧殆尽,

浑身是虫

,没有时间做出反应。

我们可以看到

且中间没有障碍物的位置的短脉冲呢?

好吧,假设一颗子弹

即将击中一位遇险的美丽
少女。

所以,我们的英雄以超快的速度猛扑过来,

抓住她

,把她带到安全的地方。

这听起来很浪漫,

但实际上,如果英雄以超快的速度移动她,那女孩

受到的伤害可能比子弹

还多。

牛顿第一运动定律
处理惯性,

即对

改变其运动状态的阻力。

所以,一个物体将继续移动

或停留在同一个地方,

除非有什么改变它。

加速度是
速度随时间变化的速率。

当女孩静止时,

速度等于每小时零英里,

开始加速以
在几秒钟内达到速度,

速度迅速

增加到每小时 25,000 英里,

她的大脑会
撞到她的头骨一侧。

而且,当她突然停下来时,

速度迅速
降低到每小时零英里,

她的大脑会
撞到她头骨的另一侧,

把她的大脑变成糊状。

大脑太脆弱,
无法处理突然的动作。 就此而言

,她身体的每一部分也是
如此。

请记住,造成伤害的不是速度

因为宇航员在阿波罗 10 号中幸存下来,

而是加速

或突然

停止导致我们的

内脏撞到我们身体的前部,

就像我们在公共汽车上向前行驶

时司机猛撞时一样 刹车。

英雄对女孩所做的在

数学

与用航天飞机以最大速度碾过她是一样的。

她可能
在撞击点立即死亡。

他要欠这个可怜的
女孩的家人一个道歉

和一张大肥的赔偿支票。

哦,还有可能面临牢狱之灾。

医生必须携带责任保险

,以防万一他们犯了错误
并伤害了他们的病人。

我想知道超级英雄
保险单要花多少钱。

现在,

您接下来将探索哪个超级大国物理课?

不断变化的身体大小和内容,

超速度,

飞行,

超力量,

不朽

隐形。