I doubt most could YOLO in a typhoon and enjoy it but these chibis are daring despite their size.
Actually they're daring BECAUSE their size. Square-Cube law states the smaller you are, the lesser the damage you will get from falling or slamming against something, due to lack of mass to generate enough force to create the lethal damage. Ants are the prime example of this: they does not have maximum drop height; technically you can drop them from the edge of the atmosphere and they'll survive (provided you can locate it afterwards...). Or just do the same thing with a duckling/chicks, they'll survive that too.
Actually they're daring BECAUSE their size. Square-Cube law states the smaller you are, the lesser the damage you will get from falling or slamming against something, due to lack of mass to generate enough force to create the lethal damage. Ants are the prime example of this: they does not have maximum drop height; technically you can drop them from the edge of the atmosphere and they'll survive (provided you can locate it afterwards...). Or just do the same thing with a duckling/chicks, they'll survive that too.
Wouldn't applying the square-cube law mean they have a significantly higher chance of catching hypothermia in the storm?
Actually they're daring BECAUSE their size. Square-Cube law states the smaller you are, the lesser the damage you will get from falling or slamming against something, due to lack of mass to generate enough force to create the lethal damage. Ants are the prime example of this: they does not have maximum drop height; technically you can drop them from the edge of the atmosphere and they'll survive (provided you can locate it afterwards...). Or just do the same thing with a duckling/chicks, they'll survive that too.
As I commented last time, they probably have a low terminal velocity (because of high air resistance relative to their mass) - the very thing that makes it possible for them to be picked up and carried by a typhoon also ensures that once the typhoon's past, they'll fall slowly enough to not be seriously injured.
There's still the risk of being blown against a building, but for that I'll fall back to fairies being unreasonably durable even beyond square-cube, given their nature as the spiritual essence of naval weaponry.
Fairies are transparent to temperature; they simply exist.
Keough said:
More like they defy the laws of nature and physics.
Mithiwithi said:
As I commented last time, they probably have a low terminal velocity (because of high air resistance relative to their mass) - the very thing that makes it possible for them to be picked up and carried by a typhoon also ensures that once the typhoon's past, they'll fall slowly enough to not be seriously injured.
There's still the risk of being blown against a building, but for that I'll fall back to fairies being unreasonably durable even beyond square-cube, given their nature as the spiritual essence of naval weaponry.
I'm more worried at how they're going to go back to their friends after being blown many many kilometers away
They Are Fairies™
Isn't that reading weird!?Ruby - the typographic term for text placed above other text inline; furigana is a type of ruby text.Ah...Why do you like typhoons so much ?Because it's a typhoon (festival)!!You'd probably just make this a pun if you were forced to make this flow better. Like... Tai-fun!About that...