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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!charnel!rat!zeus!skroger
- From: skroger@zeus.calpoly.edu (Seth L. Kroger)
- Newsgroups: talk.origins
- Subject: Re: Muscle tissue from mouse to sauropod
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.181229.144571@zeus.calpoly.edu>
- Date: 25 Jan 93 18:12:29 GMT
- References: <8411@tekig7.PEN.TEK.COM> <246@fedfil.UUCP> <1993Jan25.021927.29608@csis.dit.csiro.au>
- Organization: California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
- Lines: 33
-
- prl@csis.dit.csiro.au (Peter Lamb) writes:
- >news@fedfil.UUCP (news) writes:
- >Another entertaining possibility is that Ted's reduced felt effect of
- >gravity may not have helped flying animals all that much. Assuming a
- >constant mass, composition and depth of atmosphere, atmospheric
- >pressure would be halved by halved gravity. This would lead to a halved
- >atmospheric density (mass/vol), and so reduced lift at a constant
- >flight velocity.
-
- True, in fact the lift would be halved as well, all else remaining equal.
- The equation for lift is L = C_L * density * 1/2 V^2 * Area, where C_L is
- the coefficient of lift, and Area is the area of the wing. It is possible
- to double C_L by flying at a different attitude (or what we aero's call
- angle of attack) but you would also increase the coefficient of drag by a
- factor of 4. (C_D prop. to C_L^2) That would require more power to fly at
- the same speed with reduced gravity.
-
- >Anyone have aerodynamic equations for sinking rate which include
- >atmospheric density?
-
- What kind of sinking rate, a vertical fall or glide?
-
- >Note that all animals would have to survive in a halved oxygen partial
- >pressure, too. Maybe that's why the dinosaurs were so dumb :-) See Huxley, A,
- >"Brave New World" for how this might be applied to humans :-( .
-
- >Peter Lamb (prl@csis.dit.csiro.au)
-
-
- |======================================================================|
- | Seth Kroger "If God made us in His image we |
- | skroger@oboe.calpoly.edu have certianly returned the |
- | Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo compliment." -Voltaire |
-