Cats are renowned for always landing on their feet. While that’s not entirely true, “cat physics” sounds like an oxymoron. Scientific laws don’t appear to apply to animals that can squeeze into ...
Cats are innate masters of physics. They can leap extraordinary distances to climb things or while hunting. They have split second reflexes to catch their prey. And apparently, they can’t get enough ...
The cat seems to be doing the same thing a Slinky (just in case: a flexible coil of wire sold as a toy) can do. Within the first second, the top of the Slinky falls while the bottom remains still ...
Physicists seem to be obsessed with cats. James Clerk Maxwell, the father of electrodynamics, studied falling feline s to investigate how they turned as they fell. Many physics teachers have used a ...
[url=http://arstechnica.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=31399631#p31399631:274nfp8y said: neeksgeek[/url]":274nfp8y]Just adding my anecdotal evidence. I have seen some cats ...
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