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What is the most g-force that a human can resist?
How much G-force the human body feel damage?
How much G-force the human die?…
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6 ANSWERS

Vincent Maldia
Written Jun 27, 2015
It depends on
1. what position/direction
2. with or without training
3. duration
4. How much of the body is exposed
5. positive or negative G
" A hard slap on the face may briefly impose hundreds of g locally but not produce any real damage; a constant 16 g for a minute, however, may be deadly"
"A typical person can handle about 5G (49 m/s2) (meaning some people might pass out when riding a higher-g roller coaster, which in some cases exceeds this point) before losing consciousness, but through the combination of special g-suits and efforts to strain muscles—both of which act to force blood back into the brain—modern pilots can typically handle a sustained 9G"
"Resistance to "negative" or "downward" g, which drives blood to the head, is much lower. This limit is typically in the −2 to −3 g0 (−20 to −29 m/s2) range."
"In general when the acceleration is forwards (subject essentially lying on their back, colloquially known as "eyeballs in"[14]) a much higher tolerance is shown than when the acceleration is backwards (lying on their front, "eyeballs out") since blood vessels in the retina appear more sensitive in the latter direction"
"untrained humans were able to tolerate a range of accelerations depending on the time of exposure. This ranged from as much as 20 g for less than 10 seconds, to 10 g for 1 minute, and 6 g for 10 minutes for both eyeballs in and out."
"The record for peak experimental horizontal g-force tolerance is held by acceleration pioneer John Stapp, in a series of rocket sled deceleration experiments culminating in a late 1954 test in which he was clocked in a little over a second from a land speed of Mach 0.9. He survived a peak "eyeballs-out" force of 46.2 times the force of gravity, and more than 25 g for 1.1 seconds, proving that the human body is capable of this."
g-force
"Major John Beeding, an Air Force volunteer, endured a whopping 83g (albeit for .04 seconds) during the sled’s nearly instantaneous stop. He too walked away from the experiments none the worse for wear.
…
The human body can tolerate violent accelerations for short periods, including the prolonged high-g acceleration necessary to reach Earth orbit. However very prolonged periods of high-g acceleration during travel between planets would be very harmful to the body, and therefore out of the question."
Why the Human Body Can’t Handle Heavy Acceleration
" Experts estimate that, in the car accident that killed her, the G forces on her chest were about 70 G’s (and 100 G’s on her head). That acceleration was enough to tear the pulmonary artery in her heart, an injury almost impossible to survive. If Diana had been wearing a seatbelt, the G forces would have been in the neighborhood of 35 G’s, and she may have lived.
…
the average sneeze creates G forces of 2.9, a slap on the back 4.1, and a plop down into a chair 10.1. If you jump from three feet up and land stiff-legged, write the authors of the book Physics of the Body, you’ll feel about 100 G’s momentarily"
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/spa...
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Steve Waddington, Network Engineer, CIO and CEO. Current Gemologist
Updated Jun 27, 2015
Rocket sled tests have shown that humans can withstand very high G-forces if they are properly restrained and the force is spread out evenly. In a car crash, a passenger may experience as much as 50G deceleration, and, if secured by a seatbelt could come away with only superficial injuries.
At 75G deceleration, the expected fatality rate is 50%. Deceleration over 80G is considered always fatal.
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Steve Schafer, Coder, part-time physicist, birder
Written Jun 27, 2015
There isn’t a single answer, because it depends a lot on the circumstances. When a person decelerates suddenly, the different parts of the body will generally not all decelerate at the same rate.
Many people have endured 100g accelarations during automobile crashes, but that level of acceleration applied to the head would cause a serious concussion injury.
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George Gonzalez, Four semesters of Physics! Passed all of them!
Written Mar 16, 2015
it depends on what direction. If you are standing up you can only tolerate like 4 G before the blood drains from your head and you pass out. Lying down you can tolerate a few more, and with a pressure leggings pressing on your legs and abdomen and with you pressing down and grunting you can tolerate like 8G’s.
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Dennis Kitainik, works at Self-Employment
Written Mar 16, 2015
Pilots who flew dive-bombers during World War 2 (the German Stuka, the Russian Pe-2 and our SBD Dauntless) had to endure up to 11-12 G when pulling out of the dive — so the human body could survive at least that many (although with brief blackouts).
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Alex Parsky, studied at University of Maryland, College Park
Written Sep 24
Originally Answered: What is the most lethal G force a person can handle? Why?
Pretty sure it’s around 5gs of gravity because your heart can’t pump blood effectively if you add nor force on it.
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RELATIONSHIPSDATINGTEN TIPS FOR HAPPY DATINGTEN TIPS FOR HAPPY DATING
When you think of dating happily, you may think of spending time with an interesting and neat person, doing lots of fun and exciting things together, and connecting intimately. Yet those are only a few of the things that go into a groovy dating experience.

Credit: “April 4, 2009: Ride Training,” © 2009 Mr. Christopher Thomas, used under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/legalcode
Here are ten more things that, although they may not pop immediately to mind, are also keys to having rewarding and fun dating experiences:
Be realistic: If you’re looking for the perfect date or mate or state, you’re in trouble for two reasons: First, perfection is unlikely, if not impossible. Second, if a perfect person were to exist, he or she would most likely be looking for a perfect person, too.
So ask yourself about your expectations: Are you being reasonable? Are you asking too much of yourself, too much of your date, or too much of the situation? Best friends are really helpful in the reality check department, so when in doubt, it’s okay to say, “Am I being realistic here, or have I overdosed on romance pills?”
Be specific: Often, when people talk about the opposite sex, they either go all gooey and soft focus or become harsh and judgmental. Neither stance is particularly helpful. Look carefully at the details. Being specific is one of the best ways not only to problem-solve but to be realistic as well.
Take responsibility: All of us make mistakes — sometimes because we’re thoughtless, sometimes because we’re clueless, often out of ignorance. But when it’s clear you blew it, even though every instinct is saying play dumb, accept responsibility.
Be active: Don’t wait for someone to call you. Either make the call, take a walk, scrub the floor, scrape gum off your shoes, or jog. Don’t wait for someone else to make your day or make you happy or get the ball rolling. This is your life, not a dress rehearsal.
Don’t settle: A life is a series of compromises — going left when you wanted to go right because the taxi cut you off, taking the chicken on the buffet table because the prime rib was all gone, going to the prom with your best friend because you thought your dream date would turn you down.
There’s nothing bad or wrong about being flexible. The trick is knowing when to compromise and when to go for it.
To do that, you have to know what’s really important to you, and once you know that, don’t settle. If you don’t have what you want, make sure you do know what you want — being both realistic and specific — and then go for it. You can always reevaluate. What most people regret is not the mistakes they made but the chances they didn’t take.
Reevaluate often: Something that made you happy or behavior that pleased you or someone who rang your chimes once may or may not be in for the long haul. The only way of knowing the short term from the long term is to be willing to take your own emotional pulse from time to time.
Write stuff down: A log (not a Captain James T. Kirk kind of log, but a feelings log) can be really useful and helpful to pinpoint important times, beginnings of issues, and changes in the relationship.
It’s a great way to keep us honest and focused, and as long as you don’t leave it around for someone to find and read, there is no downside here. A log also is a way of taking responsibility privately so we can practice before we take it publicly.
Be creative: You’re not like anybody else on the planet, and neither is your date, so why do the two of you have to follow anybody else’s rules or precedents about what you want, how you act, where you go, or how you communicate? If it’s okay with the two of you — and it’s not illegal — then why not?
Be aware: Pay attention to your date and to your own responses. You don’t have to constantly monitor as though your date were in dating ICU and liable to expire at any moment, but be willing every once in a while to step out a bit and see what’s going on.
How are you? How does the date seem to be doing? Are you happy? Is it fun? Are you being attentive? Do you need more sleep? Are your senses being dulled?
Being dense is a tough way to lead your life and dangerous when you’re dealing with someone else who wants you tuned in.
Analyze fear: It is impossible to be completely without fear, and that’s okay: Fear warns us. After all, it would be stupid to cross the street without looking or do a header off the Empire State Building.
We can look at our fear, our assumptions, our anger, our patterns and decide to try to do something different. The moment we do that, our fear no longer controls us. We’re in charge of our own life, and paradoxically, these moments are most likely to happen when we let another person into our intimate life.


Text:CRL 19-165
NINETEENTH CONGRESS OF THE FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIA
THIRD SPECIAL SESSION, 2015 C.R. NO. 19-155
A RESOLUTION
Requesting the President of the Federated States of Micronesia to
terminate the Amended Compact of Free Association with the United
States of America, pursuant to section 441 of the Amended Compact,
such termination to take effect no later than 2018.
WHEREAS, the Amended Compact of Free Association was
entered into by the Federated States of Micronesia and the
United States of America with the intent of maintaining a close
and mutually beneficial relationship between our two nations;
and
WHEREAS, the United States derives many benefits from the
Amended Compact, not least of which is its exclusive control
over the military use of the Federated States of Micronesia’s
extensive territorial waters and airspace; and
WHEREAS, the recent words and deeds of United States
policymakers suggest they view the Amended Compact as an act of
charity by the United States rather than a treaty between two
sovereign nations; and
WHEREAS, the United States has abused its majority on the
US-FSM Joint Economic Management Committee (JEMCO) to force
through resolutions contrary to the interests of the Federated
States of Micronesia; and
WHEREAS, most recently, the United States members of JEMCO
have unilaterally made drastic cuts to the funding of the
C.R. NO. 19-155
College of Micronesia-FSM without prior discussion or
consultation with leaders of the Federated States of
Micronesia; and
WHEREAS, the United States Senate Committee on
Appropriations has recently recommended that the United States
Department of Homeland Security consider establishing a pre-
screening process and requiring advanced permission for
prospective travelers from the Federated States of Micronesia
and other Freely Associated States to enter the United States;
now, therefore,
BE IT RESOLVED that the Nineteenth Congress of the
Federated States of Micronesia, Third Special Session, 2015,
requests that the President of the Federated States of
Micronesia terminate the Amended Compact of Free Association
with the United States of America, pursuant to section 441 of
the Amended Compact, such termination to take effect no later
than 2018; and
25
C.R. NO. 19-155
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that certified copies of this
resolution be transmitted to the President of the Federated
States of Micronesia.
Date: 11/19/15 Introduced by: /s/ Isaac V. Figir
Isaac V. Figir
/s/ Bonsiano F. Nethon
Bonsiano F. Nethon
/s/ Robson U. Romolow
Robson U. Romolow
Mahalo
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Clifford "RAY" Hackett www.rayis.me RESUME: www.rayis.me/resume
I founded www.adapt.org in 1980 it now has over 50 million members.
$500 of material=World’s fastest hydrofoil sailboat. http://sunrun.biz
On Sat, Feb 18, 2017 at 1:13 PM, Ray Hackett <3659745> wrote:
Actual PDF doc: http://www.fsmcongress.fm/pdf%20documents/19th%20Congress/RESOLUTIONS/CR%2019-155.pdf
page PDF doc is linked from:
http://www.fsmcongress.fm/19th%20Congress/19th%20CFSM%20Resolutions.html
Mahalo
SIGNATURE:
Clifford "RAY" Hackett www.rayis.me RESUME: www.rayis.me/resumeI founded www.adapt.org in 1980 it now has over 50 million members.
$500 of material=World’s fastest hydrofoil sailboat. http://sunrun.biz