Table of Contents
What would you do if you could touch the sky answer?
1. I touch the Earth, I touch the sky, but if I touch you, you’ll likely die. What am I? The Answer is the ‘Lightning’.
What happens if you fall from the sky into water?
Rather, when you enter water at those speeds, it’s more like hitting a solid. And if your body hits a solid (or water) at a high speed, all your internal organs go smashing around in your body, bones break, and you die from blunt force trauma. If you somehow survive the impact, you’ll probably be immobilized and drown.
What is always in front of you but never seen?
What is always in front of you but can’t be seen? Answer: The future! 10.
What is the voice change of have you done it?
Answer: Has it been done by you?
What are things that fall?
Things that fall
- free-fall.
- snowfall.
- befall.
- downfall.
- overfall.
- outfall.
- windfall.
- dew-fall.
What happens if you fall into the ocean?
Cold shock response. When the human body suddenly becomes immersed in chilling water (like in the case of falling overboard in the sea), it involuntarily lets out all the air inside it and involuntarily tries to gasp and take in as much air as possible.
Can you survive a freefall into water?
No, we cannot survive a fall into water at terminal velocity (about 325km/hr). At that speed the change in velocity upon entering the water would be like hitting concrete. The Complete Book of Sky Sports lists a 77kg/170lb person as reaching terminal velocity in 14 seconds. That’s about 10,000 ft/3,000 meters.
Did you see the flaming objects that fell from the sky?
Last week many people around the world witnessed slow-moving flaming objects that fell from the skies, reports ufosightingshotspot.blogspot.com.
Is it true that falling from a great height will kill you?
There’s a fairly common belief that if you happen to fall from a great height, you’ll be “dead before you hit the ground”. The reasons given probably stem from fear of your imminent death, or a generalised terror, leading to shock, heart attack, or even asphyxiation.
Could a human survive a fall from a plane?
Human beings can sustain 100 G’s for short bursts of time (a race car driver named Kenny Bräck survived a racing accident in 2003 wherein a deceleration of 214 G’s was measured), but in the case of falling from a plane, it would be fairly higher than that (around 300 G’s). No human could survive that… not a regular Homo sapien, at least.
What are some interesting facts about falling stars?
Interesting Facts About Falling (Shooting) Stars Over 25 million meteors hit the Earth’s atmosphere every day. Chondrites, which are stone meteorites, are the most common type of meteorite. Chondrites that have been found have been dated 4.55 billion years.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M2uSlM-utPw