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Quite rightEpisode submitted by chompy on Wed Jan 4 19:59:34 2012 Return to Parent Episode I'm no phsyics expert either... though I did take the question and was on my way to writing a virtual thesis on different ways to answer. :S It has applications in quantum physics at small scale and is the science of Rheology (of which I did a lot of work in but have forgotten 90% of it). Not going to bore you, as I realise it's not quite what you're after. Yeah if the strands are fragile as compared to the force being applied, its just going to break. F=MA. Greater the mass and acceleration, the more force is going to be applied. If the object is too big to go through the strands, the strands will break apart. You can probably describe it in terms of momentum given the objects will be acting as solids to each other. With enough momentum the sieve might as well not be there. Karyn's mom | |
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