Re: Study Science with Manga
I've just come recently to the study corner section and this thread. It proves I don't like studying.
As a mod I have to spot the errors in the demonstration done on OPwiki not to let MH members do physics wrongly ;)
First, he forgot an important hypothesis. With his reasoning the center of mass of the guy that flies shall be... in the head. Only the center of mass has a parabolic trajectory when a body is in a uniform field of force. If we use solid mechanics the movement of the body would be the addition of this trajectory and a rotation. Think about the same experience but in space. Actually, in the anime Planetes, it is important to understand some of the scenes. The girl had some problems with adjusting the axis of the force with the center of mass and she begins to rotate. That was quite good in the anime here. I have some doubt about other scientific statements elsewhere in the anime though. For example, I don't remember which atom it was (deuterium?), but I don't think the moon can store such a light element because there is not enough gravity. On the long term they would have been ejected.
On the other hand you don't need gravity knowledge to see Bakemonogotari woo! :D
EDIT: lol, after I wrote that I read an article mentioning helium-3 on the moon, I looked it up on Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helium-3
Not sure how He-3 is stored, whether it is just trapped or with an ionic form with other elements.
Till the calculation of the horizontal speed, it is correct, but it is weird to keep the movement equations under a parametric form (depending on the time).
Things get complicated to calculate the energy necessary to eject the guy.
First he takes as a hypothesis that the contact remains during 0.1 second. For a hypothesis that the flight lasts 0.63 with the same speed, it becomes not negligible and screws the previous reasoning (constant horizontal speed). Moreover, the head travels at least more than 5 meters for 0.1 sec, so Sanji has pretty long legs. And there is some confusion between the force and the work of the force that is the real thing to calculate to know how much energy the flying guy receives. Whatever the force applied, what is important is the final kinetics energy you can calculate easily with the speed and the mass of the flying guy. And you can add as a hypothesis that the transfer of energy from the kick to the guy is instantaneous in comparison to the 0.63 seconds. (Note: Power and force are too different concepts and such power does not have newton as a unit)
Re: Study Science with Manga
Thankgod I don't have science and those complicated stuff since I chose to have an artistic education when I finished junior high school. Perhaps the most complicated thing I have is geometry since I want to be an architect I really need it.
Re: Study Science with Manga
This kind of makes me remember how Inui defeated Ootori and Shishido pair by his data tennis.
Wow, was all I said.
Re: Study Science with Manga
This is crazy. I didn't know there's such a thing in a manga. Manga is supposed for fun, not studying! XD But still, it's interesting. Thank you for the awesome sharing. :P
Re: Study Science with Manga
Quote:
Originally Posted by
phio_chan
This is crazy. I didn't know there's such a thing in a manga. Manga is supposed for fun, not studying! XD But still, it's interesting. Thank you for the awesome sharing. :P
The way you said it will make people who like studying say something like this: "Hey, studying is fun!" XD
Ah, it's really interesting. I like things that can broaden my knowledge. :)
Re: Study Science with Manga
i think the manga containing study compartiments is Toriko, the Mangaka is a genius <3 (nutrition, biology, physics...) pretty cool :D
Re: Study Science with Manga
If you ever want to learn physics read Air Gear and consider the opposite of what the mangaka says true :lmao