James Gasik
We don't talk about Pun-Pun
Thanks a lot, I rather like those rules, though I'd be tempted to add rules for spiked shields. I like parry, and it made me realize another thing we need rules for- defensive weapons like the main gauche.
you might like Level UpThanks a lot, I rather like those rules, though I'd be tempted to add rules for spiked shields. I like parry, and it made me realize another thing we need rules for- defensive weapons like the main gauche.
So people keep telling me. Now if I wasn't constantly distracted, I'd look at it more closely. : )you might like Level Up
Correct."but acceleration is inversely proportional to mass, so it cancels out "
Or even then, but I never said it did. I said that force being proportional to mass and acceleration being inversely proportional to mass cancel out, so in vacuo everything falls at a constant acceleration (assuming constant gravity). Because it does and they do.The alteration due to air resistance does not simply "cancel out" unless and until you hit terminal velocity
Cannot be correct as constants do not vary (within scope) so they are not inversely or linearly or anything else proportionate to any thing... the force remains proportionate to mass with as I agree slight reduction due to dragCorrect.
Or even then, but I never said it did. I said that force being proportional to mass and acceleration being inversely proportional to mass cancel out, so in vacuo everything falls at a constant acceleration (assuming constant gravity). Because it does and they do.
Once you add air resistance into the equation, that technically ceases to be true, but the effect of air resistance on creatures of human size and mass is negligable. AIUI, the effect on smaller creatures is considerably less negliable.
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glass.
Can be, and is.Cannot be correct
g absolutely changes, it just does not change enough to worry about for the most part, so for our current purposes we can treat it as a constant. That aside, I cannot really follow what you are saying so instead of trying to rebut it in detail I will just lay out in a bit more detail how it actually works and challenge you to rebut me:as constants do not vary (within scope) so they are not inversely or linearly or anything else proportionate to any thing... the force remains proportionate to mass with as I agree slight reduction due to drag
F=mg.... where g does not change and mass does (as we are talking about larger vs smaller things)
Exactly so we ignore it. you were or appeared to be claiming it is changing enough to "cancel" the change in force due to mass... it is not cancelling anything about force. (assuming force of damage from a fall)Can be, and is.
g absolutely changes, it just does not change enough to worry about for the most part, so for our current purposes we can treat it as a constant.
Your wording indicating that the constant of gravity was somehow countering/cancelling the increased force due to increase in mass. It does not.That aside, I cannot really follow what you are saying
This is very much not what you said (if it were i would not dispute it and you can simply consider what you mean not in dispute just how you expressed it)Therefore, acceleration due to gravity (neglecting air resistance) is independant of mass. QED.
glass.
(also a trivial truth) And you were talking directly about force and how mass increased it but acceleration was cancelling that, ie so now it is a sudden change up and you are claiming the rest of the sentence was about velocity?TLDR: How fast you fall is (neglecting air resistance) completely independant of mass. Counterintuitive, but true.
Terminal velocity is when the acceleration due to g has been resisted completely by air resistance (you are no longer accelerating -(but get to decelerate from velocity that on impact)Including the effects of air resistance makes things a lot more complicated, but as I understand it does not make much difference to humans (OTOH, unless they are denser than normal living creatures, creatures the size of hamsters are pretty much immune to falling damage).
That was not my "original statement". My original statements were 1) that the mass on both side of the equation cancel, so in vacuo acceleration is independant of mass and 2) that in atmosphere this is technically no longer correct but for falling humans the difference is negliable (not so much for smaller creatures). While I have laid my position out in more detail since, i have never changed it.However your original statement stated A cancelled the increase in force due to mass by being inversely proportional .... and if you are looking for force (* or subsequently energy which is a better measure) from impact ie falling damage remains increased due to mass it remains higher for larger objects, (yes with g remaining close enough to the same for normal objects etc.)
Correct.Terminal velocity is when the acceleration due to g has been resisted completely by air resistance (you are no longer accelerating
Incorrect. For the reasons now outlined at length, the only reason mass matters at all is due to air resistance.Tiny creatures are low enough mass the force of impact is low its not air resistance.