• Noodle07@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    On Mars you wouldn’t be able to have cabinets tall enough so that your cat can’t jump on them

    • pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      The cabinet could be 20 feet tall and they’d still figure out how to get up there.

      My parents have 4 cats and these ones are a lot different than all of the other cats we’ve had over the decades. My parents have a wall mounted cabinet where the bottom portion is about 5 feet off the ground and the top of it is about 8 feet off the ground. There’s about 6-9" between the top and the ceiling, and various decorations up there… The kitchen table is about a foot in front of it, at normal height, about 3-4 feet from the ground.

      One day I noticed one of the cats was on top of the cabinet! That’s a good 6 foot jump at a steep angle (100°, 110°? I suck at Trig) and she didn’t move a single decoration!

      • cynar@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I got bored and was curious myself.

        Assuming a cat can jump just over 2m (record is around 7’ apparently) then you have a launch velocity of around 6.5m/s. Plugging this in as an escape velocity works out to around a 1-2km diameter asteroid. Not huge, but not bad for a small animal.

        My error bars are quite large, so it’s only an order of magnitude calculation.

        • abbotsbury@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Yeah thats not bad, assuming the asteroid is a perfect sphere, that comes out to a surface area of 12km2 for an interstellar cat colony that can move into orbit at will.