How fast are these huge bugs hitting my windshield at when I’m doing 55? 60-65? 70-75? What’s the frequency on that, Kenneth?
They splatter everywhere on the windshield. But if I dropped one from the Empire State Building with it’s wings tied together… would it live when it hit the ground???
Someone from Moose Jaw (great name!) beat me to it.
The terminal velocity of a small to medium ant [with legs splayed] is about 4 mph (6.4 km/hour), according to the physics department of the University of Illinois. [Bet you didn’t know that…]
An ant goes 4 mph when she hits — about 1/30th times slower than a falling man on impact. She absorbs only 1/26,000,000th (1/26 millionth) times the energy of the man (assuming an ant weighs 1/10th of an ounce (0.3 g) and a man 180 pounds (82 kg)). No wonder the man probably dies and the ant walks away, unhurt. “Sufficiently small animals cannot be hurt in a fall from any height: A monkey is too big, a squirrel is on the edge, but a mouse is completely safe,” says biologist Michael C. LaBarbera of the University of Chicago.
It may have just been unlucky and landed headfirst, or something. The ethics of repeating the experiment sufficient times to determine this are a little murky, I fear.