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Interesting Lecture On Thursday

Well, as we all know the holidays are approaching and it seems to be a wonderfule, magical time of year. But not too magical...Cough-santa-cough.

That's right the big jolly man himself was what made Christmas really magical but that was ruined for me 5 or 6 yeras ago. Now, before continuing read the following sentence.

NOTE: This doesn't involve the magic we usually talk about. But moreso the magic of the holidays and a funny story. Moderators please read this before doing anything.

Well, as it got closer to Christmas my science teacher began to talk about Santa Claus constantly and talked about him like he was a fact rather than fiction. One day it was too much for one girl and she yelled out: "Okay...are you being serious because it's not funny. Santa is fake! You are annoying us."

He laughed at her and said: "You believe Santa is fake?" we all looked generally confused. "Wait until Thursday. I will give my final lecture of 2008. In my lecture I will prove to you, using physics as well as the theory fm relitivety that Santa does exist!" He said. We all laughed but he swore to us that he wasn't lying.

So I asked some Seniors who had him about this lecture and they told me that it is an amazing lecture and really does get you to believe in Santa again. They say that it actually proves his existance. Note: these aren't funny kids but serious students.

I can't wait to see if the magic of Christmas can be rekindled.

IN SUMMARY...

On Thursday my teacher is giving us a lecture which will suuposedly prove Santas existance. All of his old students vouch for this and say that it's amazing. I can't wait.

(I'll post a thread about the lecture Thursday afternoon.)
Dylan P.
 
Aug 31, 2007
199
0
Long Island
Haha thats pretty cool, however I'm never going to believe in Santa Clause because I'm sure those " facts " are either, wrong or misleading. I have many facts that prove he is fake, 1 of them is that I don't even have a chimney and I still get presents -ha.

But tell us what he lectures u on.
 
Don't be too sure about this one. This guy is a genius and is absolutely amazing. but he refuses to work at a colege because he had bad expiriances when he attended harvard. Seriously dude, keep an open mind. An open mind is one of the greatest things an artist can have.
 
Oct 17, 2007
860
0
31
Aussie NSW
Haha thats pretty cool, however I'm never going to believe in Santa Clause because I'm sure those " facts " are either, wrong or misleading. I have many facts that prove he is fake, 1 of them is that I don't even have a chimney and I still get presents -ha.

But tell us what he lectures u on.

Sneaks in through the front door :p
 
Oct 24, 2007
314
0
My fiancee's brother is a Marine and this was written by one of his Marine friends.

SANTA THEORY
The Physics of Santa Clause: Can He Really Exist?

______________________________________________________________​


The Facts (and some reasonable assumptions):

According to the world census, there are approximately 6.5 billion people on the planet currently.

Of these people, approximately 1.2 billion of them are children under the age of 10.

Further, only 33% of planet is Christian (and thus eligible for presents from Santa).

This leaves approximately 400 million children in the world.
Also according to the world census, there are approximately 3.55 children per household.

This means there are nearly 112.7 million households that Santa would have to travel to.

The surface area of the planet is 196,939,900 mi2
Of this, only 29.2% is land (the other 70.8% is water).
This leaves 57.5 million mi2 of land.

For the sake of simplicity, if we assume nearly uniform distribution of the 112.7 million homes over 57.5 million mi2 of land, then Santa must travel an average of 0.7144 miles from house to house.
This means that to travel to all 112.7 million homes, he must travel a total distance of 80.5 million miles.

Let us further estimate that each child sleeps for 8 hours which is Santa’s window of time to deliver the presents.
Assuming Santa uses the rotation of the earth and knowledge of time zones to his advantage, he will have 32 hours to deliver presents to houses. (We use this number for simplicity and to get a more realistic value. If Santa wanted, he could technically get 34 hours to deliver presents, although the extra two hours he gained would be wasted on a few low-population islands and some uninhabited islands in the Pacific Ocean near the International Date Line. He would then have 32 hours to finish the rest of world. The total amount of houses visited in those two hours is negligible in comparison to the rest of the houses in the world. For this reason, we say that Santa has 32 hours to deliver presents and not 34 hours.)

To travel 80.5 million miles in 32 hours, Santa must travel at 2.51 million miles/hour, 41,925 miles/min, or 698.7 miles/sec. (Mach 3306 or 3306 times the speed of sound)

Fun Facts:
- The moon is 238,856 miles away (average distance). Modern spaceships take roughly half a day to get to the moon. Santa could fly there in just under 6 minutes.

- The sun is about 92.9 million miles away. On Christmas Eve, Santa travels a total distance which is nearly the distance from earth to the sun. In fact, if he didn’t have to stop over 112 million times, he could travel to the sun in under a day (assuming a constant supply of oxygen and that his reindeers flying abilities do not change in zero gravity or with a lack of an atmosphere).

- It takes Santa 1.022 milliseconds to deliver presents to a house. This includes slowing down his sleigh and stopping, finding the correct presents for the house, getting down the chimney (or through a window), placing the presents neatly under the tree, eating the milk and cookies, getting back to his sleigh, speeding it back up, and getting to the next home. He does this for 32 hours straight.

- The average time it takes a human to blink his/her eye is approximately 350 milliseconds. Santa can deliver presents to over 300 homes in the time it takes you to blink your eyes.

- The fastest fighter jet on the earth is the Russian Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-25 which has a top speed of 2,385 mph (mach 3.2). Santa is over a thousand times faster.

Let us assume that 1 in 5 houses (20%) leave milk and cookies for Santa. This means that roughly 22.54 million homes give Santa milk and cookies.
We will also estimate that each of these houses leaves 3 cookies and an 8 fl.oz. glass of milk. This means that Santa eats 67.6 million cookies and drinks 1.4 million gallons of milk (180 million fl.oz.) on Christmas Eve. If we estimate a cookie to be 50 Calories and a gallon of milk to be 2,000 Calories (note that these values are only approximations and that actual values vary depending on the size/type of cookie and the brand/type of milk (skim vs. whole milk)) , then Santa consumes 3.38 billion Calories worth of cookies and 2.82 billion Calories worth of milk (for a total of 6.2 billion Calories consumed in 32 hours). It is reasonable to assume that the reindeer consume most of this since they are doing most of the work on Christmas Eve.

(Continues in Next Post)
 
Oct 24, 2007
314
0
If we estimate that each child receives a present (or lump of coal) that is an average of 5 lbs. (Some presents like bicycles may weigh 20+ lbs. Some presents like video games and underwear may weigh only a couple lbs. Some children also receive multiple presents from Santa. We will give Santa the benefit of the doubt and say it averages to 5 lbs. total per child.), then at max capacity, if Santa is carrying gifts for 400 million children in his magic bag, he is hauling 2 billion pounds of cargo on his sleigh. (Based on a post Santa made in his blog at www.santa.com on Christmas morning 2007, we know that Santa has a magic bag and that he can carry all these presents. He fits all of them in the bag using a contraption he refers to as a “Present Compactor.”)

While flying at his average speed and carrying his average amount of cargo (half his maximum or 1 billion pounds), Santa has 2.868x1020 joules of kinetic energy (equivalent to 68,546 megatons of TNT or nearly 7 times as much energy as all the nuclear weapons on earth put together).

Fun Facts:
- The “little boy” nuclear bomb that destroyed Hiroshima was 0.013 megaton nuclear blast (meaning that in the event of a crash, at average speed and load, and assuming the earth was dense enough to absorb the impact, Santa would release 5.27 million times as much energy into the surface of the earth than the amount that leveled Hiroshima).

- Santa is a sorcerer! (or something similar with magical powers) This becomes apparent when observing all of Santa’s feats/abilities (his ability to make countless enslaved elves produce 400 million presents a year, his ability to make 9 reindeer fly, his small red bag of 400 million+ presents that he carries around on his back whose size/volume defy the laws of physics and space, his knowledge of which children are naughty/nice and when they are asleep, his immortality, his ability to be in multiple malls and other places at once, etc.)

- Santa (being that he is a sorcerer) can create force fields. Without a force field or some type of shielding, the amount of force exerted on Santa and his reindeer caused by air resistance (quadratic drag) during flight at his average speed and the amount of heat generated (from ram pressure) would be enough to completely vaporize Santa and his reindeer almost instantly after take-off.

If we assume that Santa would try to make his trip expending the least amount of energy possible, he would minimize the amount of force he and his reindeer needed to exert on his sleigh, thus minimizing the acceleration. For minimum acceleration, they would have to accelerate at a constant rate and would also need to spend the entire 1.022 milli-seconds per house to accelerating. This means that he would need the ability to stop instantaneously, deliver presents instantaneously, etc. for each house. From this, we can conclude that his max speed would be exactly double his average speed (5 million miles per hour) and his acceleration would be 8.857 trillion miles per hour2. (note that if Santa could not stop his sleigh, deliver presents, etc. instantaneously, then his max speed and acceleration would be even greater than our estimates)
Given his acceleration and the weight of his sleigh, we can determine that Santa’s reindeer must apply a constant 2.243 x 1017 pound force to the sleigh (at minimum and not counting air resistance).

If Santa is a sorcerer, it would be fair to assume that his powers are advanced enough to make an aerodynamic force field to generate less drag and heat. Given the shape of his sleigh and configuration of his reindeer, he would probably choose a force field shape similar to a bullet or symmetrical egg to minimize cross-sectional area.
Given the mean diameter and density of the earth, estimating the radius of the cross-sectional area of his force field to be about 1 meter (or roughly 3 feet), and using his average speed, we could determine that if Santa hit the ground and kept pushing, the drag caused by the earth would not only be not enough to stop him from going straight through the planet, but Santa would continue to speed up the entire time he was traveling through. He exerts a force approximately 257 times stronger than the earth exerts back on him. (this number would vary depending on the exact shape of his force field)

Fun Facts:
- As a reference, imagine the amount of force it takes for you to do a 200 lb. bench press. Santa’s reindeer exert a force on the sleigh over 1 quadrillion times stronger (that’s 1 with 15 zeros after it).

- While accelerating at minimum acceleration, Santa experiences 902.89 billion g’s of force (that’s a force equal to 902.89 billion times the force of gravity) for 32 hours straight. About 15 g’s of force would kill the average man in one minute.

- At maximum speed (note again that Santa’s actual maximum speed would be significantly higher than our theoretical value calculated above) and while carrying his average load, if Santa were to crash land into the earth, assuming again he hit a point that was dense enough to take the impact, Santa would have enough kinetic energy to register as a 10 out of 10 on the theoretical Torino Impact Scale. This scale is used to rate how dangerous an asteroid is when colliding with the earth. A 10 of 10 on the scale denotes a global catastrophe. Upon impact, so much dust from the earth and smoke/soot from resulting fires would get caught in the stratosphere (for months or even years) that it could very well result in a nuclear winter. As a result, most rays from the sun would be blocked from our view by the “dirty” stratosphere. Global temperatures would drop, we would notice significant changes in weather patterns, and the first to meet their demise would be many of the plants that rely on the sun for photosynthesis. Afterward, animals that rely on these plants for nutrition (herbivores) would begin to die out. Finally, animals that use these herbivores for sustenance (carnivores) would begin to perish as well. A significant percentage of all life on the planet could be lost by one crash of Santa’s sleigh carrying only half its load.

Although we can’t calculate the amount of heat given off during flight due to many unknown factors (we don’t know the properties of the force field, we’ve never seen an object travel in our atmosphere nearly that fast, etc.), we can give some points of reference. When traveling at hypersonic speeds, the faster the object, the hotter it gets. The fastest object ever recorded to travel through air on earth was the Stardust capsule traveling at nearly 29,000 mph and reached temperatures estimated to be nearly 5,600° degrees Fahrenheit. Santa travels over 170 times faster than the shuttle did. As a reference, the surface of the sun is approximately 9,900° Fahrenheit.

So from all of this, we can conclude that one of the following must be true. Which one is true is up to you to decide….
Santa has magic powers and can defy many laws of physics.
Santa Claus doesn’t exist.

______________________________________________________________​

I found that interesting and pretty funny. Peace!

Tyler
 
Dec 13, 2008
32
0
51
Midwest
Dylan,
I for one am looking forward to the recap of the lecture you will hear. I have 8 year old and 3 year old daughter...so YES, I do believe in Santa.
 
Dylan,
I for one am looking forward to the recap of the lecture you will hear. I have 8 year old and 3 year old daughter...so YES, I do believe in Santa.


Like I said man. I am not too sure what to think. He totally belives that he can prove this. And as do many of his old students that I have talked to. Hopefully my recap will be easy too understand and I won't leave too much out.
 
I personally don't own a camera and you can't have them in school unless you are in the videology class. We also can't rent one from the media room becaust this Santa lecture is not in the school curiculum, therefor it should not techinically be taught. But, I will take notes to use as a guide later.
 
Sep 3, 2007
2,562
0
Europe
I personally don't own a camera and you can't have them in school unless you are in the videology class. We also can't rent one from the media room becaust this Santa lecture is not in the school curiculum, therefor it should not techinically be taught. But, I will take notes to use as a guide later.

Cough**audio recorder**cough.
 
Jul 26, 2008
470
0
NJ
Santa (being that he is a sorcerer) can create force fields. Without a force field or some type of shielding, the amount of force exerted on Santa and his reindeer caused by air resistance (quadratic drag) during flight at his average speed and the amount of heat generated (from ram pressure) would be enough to completely vaporize Santa and his reindeer almost instantly after take-off.

I love this.
 
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