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Would it beat the average air speed of an un ladened swallow?

2007-07-01 01:45:25 · 6 answers · asked by Bonathon M 3 in Education & Reference Homework Help

6 answers

No. A pink elephant is not very aerodynamic. Everywhere at his flappy ears, his wrinkled skin and his funny body protrusions swirls of air would form, slowing down his flight.

The faster he tried to fly, the more powerful those swirls would get. Near speed of an unladen swallow, these swirls would detach themselved from the elephant and form tornados.

That being said, I can only speculate that all the tornados over Kansas are caused by flying pink elephants. These are probably created by drunken hallucinating people in Texas and then drift north with the upper atmospheric winds.

2007-07-01 02:09:16 · answer #1 · answered by Bqggz 3 · 1 0

It would, assuming you want the elephant to stay airborne. It'll have to fly fast enough to 'fall' with the curving of the Earth. Think of it like a satellite, they need to go very fast or else they'll fall from their orbit, so in essence their falling, but because of their tangential speed, they don't drop in altitude from the Earth.

2007-07-01 08:54:18 · answer #2 · answered by Philip H 2 · 1 0

Would that be an African Swallow or a European Swallow?

2007-07-01 08:53:17 · answer #3 · answered by WMD 7 · 3 0

Must be a European swallow. African swallows aren't migratory.

2007-07-01 08:54:43 · answer #4 · answered by osborne_pkg 5 · 2 0

It would depend if the pachyderm were creating wind sheer.

2007-07-01 08:54:24 · answer #5 · answered by jamoca 7 · 1 0

I think it's a question of weight ratios!

2007-07-01 09:03:37 · answer #6 · answered by Jellen 2 · 1 0

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