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Joined 10 months ago
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Cake day: June 23rd, 2025

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  • Personally, as a New Mexico resident, I live in New Mexico. I live in New Mexico. I live in New Mexico. I live in New Mexico. I live in New Mexico. I live in New Mexico. I live in New Mexico. I live in New Mexico. I live in New Mexico. I live in New Mexico. I like to sail. I like to sail. I like to sail. I like to sail. I like to sail. I like to sail. I like to sail. I like to sail. I have a pet ferret named Ashley Von Braun. I have a pet ferret named Ashley Von Braun. I have a pet ferret named Ashley Von Braun. I have a pet ferret named Ashley Von Braun. I have a pet ferret named Ashley Von Braun. I have a pet ferret named Ashley Von Braun. I have a pet ferret named Ashley Von Braun. I have a pet ferret named Ashley Von Braun. I have a pet ferret named Ashley Von Braun.







  • So, multiple options here. Skydivers regularly hit terminal velocity, as fast as they’ll go in atmosphere, before pulling their chutes. At these speeds, heat from friction isn’t enough to worry about. Once again though, if you’re coming down from space, that “in atmosphere” asterisk goes away. If you’re dropping from a satellite, you’re going at speeds necessary to orbit, and you don’t have anything slowing you down until you hit the atmosphere. Suddenly your terminal velocity is way lower than infinity, and the friction you’re feeling from the atmosphere is INTENSE, rapidly turning that speed into heat


  • So, yes and no. Acceleration due to gravity impacts all objects equally. With no air resistance, on earth, everything speeds up at 9.8m/s/s. But, that “no air resistance” is a big asterisk. This is why, say, parachutes work. It’s also how we get terminal velocity. Often misinterpreted as “how fast you’d have to go to die from a fall” it’s actually “how fast you need to go before the drag from your air resistance is a force greater than or equal to gravity”