Not of you're hard, like me. It's just painful for the ground.
no
Yes, people can die in mid-air while falling from great heights. They can die from oxygen deprivation if the height is large enough. They can die from extreme cold if the height is large enough. They can die from heart attack, stroke, or some other complication of terror.
Yes, people can die in mid-air while falling from great heights. They can die from oxygen deprivation if the height is large enough. They can die from extreme cold if the height is large enough. They can die from heart attack, stroke, or some other complication of terror.
In order to save the required number of lemmings to win, one must determine how to A lemming can die in a number of ways: falling from a great height.
Yes, if you fall from a great distance, for example, if your parachute failed to open.
When you hit the ground. While they are falling they are in the air, and falling in and of itself will not kill you. The impact will always kill you -- unless you have a heart attack during the fall.
It appears that villains in the Disney Animated Canon have an especially curious tendency to exit the film by falling off or out of things. Either they simply die offscreen by falling, or, less commonly, they die onscreen and then fall. The Brooklyn Bridge had stories of men dying from falling. During the attacks in 9 11 some people jumped to their deaths. When people die from falling from a certain height, most likely the explanation is: cause of death "due to multiple blunt force injuries, due to fall from a great height" It is estimated that the human body reaches 99% of its low-level terminal velocity after falling1880ft which takes 13-14 sec. This is 117-125mph at normal atmospheric pressure and in a random posture. On a mathematical note, the acceleration force is always constant, whereas the drag increases as the square of the speed. The line reaches an asymptote at about 125mph. Interestingly though, it is actually the mph bit at the end which actually kills you. <- haha,nerd
It is very possible that you will die when you fall from 30 feet. The way that you land when you fall from that height can cause you to break your neck, crack your skull or even have internal bleeding.
I Challenge all the unrelated concepts in this questionDeath from falling:You do not die falling from a height. You die from the improperly planned deceleration at the bottom. Example: Parachuting VS Suicide Gravitation VS Magnetic PowerGravitational force is strong enough to hold the Earth, Solar System and Galaxy togetherThe Largest magnet ever built I couldn't feel a mile away.
You can die from falling one foot, it's all about the landing.
The Falling Man died in 2001.
By falling