ChatterBank5 mins ago
What is the terminal velocity of a standard pub dart?
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Everyone knows that a person stupid enough to jump out of a perfectly good aircraft will reach top speed, or terminal velocity, of about 120 miles per hour. What is the terminal velocity of a standard dart I find in a pub if I throw that out of an airplane, which is say 20,000 feet up? What is the speed when it hits the ground, and what could it go through? I would imagine it would go through a person like a hot knife through butter.
Thanks for any sensible replies.
Thanks for any sensible replies.
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by JonnyBoy12. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Without kowing the weight, size, condition, area to wind resistance etc. I don't think it is possible to work it out anywhere near exact, but as a freefall standard average bullet has a TV of about 200mph, I guess a dart would fall at about 250mph. This is not fast enough to go through a person.
The dart, being relatively small, would reach TV even if dropped off a tall building.
The dart, being relatively small, would reach TV even if dropped off a tall building.
Here is a NASA web page with an applet that calculates terminal verocity
http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/k-12/airplane/termv.html
There is a thread here that discusses tranquilised darts as having a drag coefficient of about .2 - I'd imagine the cross-sectional area would be about .000005 square m
So that comes out at about 44m/s or about 98 miles per hour.
Mind you a tranquiliser dart's probably not very aerodynamic - see if you can find the drag coefficient for a standard dart and feed in the figures
http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/k-12/airplane/termv.html
There is a thread here that discusses tranquilised darts as having a drag coefficient of about .2 - I'd imagine the cross-sectional area would be about .000005 square m
So that comes out at about 44m/s or about 98 miles per hour.
Mind you a tranquiliser dart's probably not very aerodynamic - see if you can find the drag coefficient for a standard dart and feed in the figures
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