Huffington Postのインスタグラム(huffpost) - 8月4日 22時55分


The video opens with a cacophony of bangs and bonks, as the unseen officer loses a great battle. Suddenly, he toboggans into frame, turtle-style — legs first, face-down — whipping along the outer rim of the slide before he spills from its wide metal maw onto the ground.⁠

After the clip of a Boston police officer catapulting out of a children’s slide at the recently renovated City Hall Plaza playground went viral, many wondered how the officer reached such an alarming speed. (The officer sustained and recovered from a minor head injury.) Boston Mayor Michelle Wu promised “to make sure there’s more signage that this is for children or something.”⁠

Out of a shared concern for playground safety, HuffPost asked a physicist why the officer was going so fast and how others could avoid his misadventures.⁠

“Normal people, when they go down a slide, they’re fine,” said Rhett Allain, an associate professor of physics at Southeastern Louisiana University and the author of “The Physics of Going Fast—but Not Too Fast—on a Giant Slide,” for Wired. “I would guess it has to be something about the clothes he’s wearing.”⁠

All other things being equal, a child and an adult ought to go down a slide at the same speed. Yes, the earth’s gravitational pull increases with an object’s mass — but objects with more mass also accelerate more slowly, and the two factors perfectly cancel each other out, Allain said. It’s the reason why, if you drop a golf ball and a bowling ball from the same height, they’ll hit the ground at the same time.⁠

The major difference-maker is friction.⁠

“Friction depends on the two surfaces interacting, so if you have a metal slide and it’s in contact with skin or cotton clothes you have a certain coefficient of friction,” Allain said. “And if you change the material, maybe to something stiff, it could make it a lot slipperier.”⁠

A public information officer for the Boston Police Department did not immediately respond to HuffPost’s request for comment on the material used to make officers’ uniforms.⁠

Read more at our link in bio. // 📷 Twitter // 🖊️ Molly Redden


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