Orders of magnitude (acceleration)
Comparison of a wide range of accelerations
This page lists examples of the acceleration occurring in various situations. They are grouped by orders of magnitude .
Factor [m/s2 ]
Multiple
Reference frame
Value
[g ]
Item
10−∞
0 m/s2
inertial
0 m/s2
0 g
The gyro rotors in Gravity Probe B and the free-floating proof masses in the TRIAD I navigation satellite[ 1]
inertial
≈ 0 m/s2
≈ 0 g
Weightless parabola in a reduced-gravity aircraft
10 −14
10 fm/s2
lab
5× 10 −14 m/s2
5× 10 −15 g
Smallest acceleration in a scientific experiment[ 2]
10 −3
1 mm/s2
Solar system
5.93× 10 −3 m/s2
6.04× 10 −4 g
Acceleration of Earth toward the sun due to sun's gravitational attraction
10 −1
1 dm/s2
lab
0.25 m/s2
0.026 g
Train acceleration for SJ X2 [citation needed ]
10 0
1 m/s2
inertial
1.62 m/s2
0.1654 g
Standing on the Moon at its equator [citation needed ]
lab
4.3 m/s2
0.44 g
Car acceleration 0–100 km/h in 6.4 s with a Saab 9-5 Hirsch [citation needed ]
inertial
9.80665 m/s2
1 g
Standard gravity , the gravity acceleration on Earth at sea level standard[ 3]
101
1 dam/s2
inertial
11.2 m/s2
1.14 g
Saturn V Moon rocket just after launch[citation needed ]
inertial
15.2 m/s2
1.55 g
Bugatti Veyron from 0 to 100 km/h in 2.4 s (the net acceleration vector including gravitational acceleration is directed 40 degrees from horizontal[citation needed ] )
inertial
29 m/s2
3 g
Space Shuttle , maximum during launch and reentry [citation needed ]
inertial
29 m/s2
3 g
Sustainable for > 25 seconds, for a human[ 3]
inertial
34 – 49 m/s2
3.5 – 5 g
High-G roller coasters [ 4] : 340
lab?
41 m/s2
4.2 g
Top Fuel drag racing world record of 4.4 s over 1/4 mile[citation needed ]
inertial
49 m/s2
5 g
Causes disorientation, dizziness and fainting in humans[ 3]
lab?
49+ m/s2
5+ g
Formula One car , maximum under heavy braking[citation needed ]
inertial?
51 m/s2
5.2 g
Luge , maximum expected at the Whistler Sliding Centre [citation needed ]
lab
49 – 59 m/s2
5 – 6 g
Formula One car , peak lateral in turns[ 5]
inertial
59 m/s2
6 g
Parachutist peak during normal opening of parachute[ 6]
inertial
+69 / -49 m/s2
+7 / -5 g
Standard, full aerobatics certified glider [citation needed ]
inertial
70.6 m/s2
7.19 g
Apollo 16 on reentry[ 7]
inertial
79 m/s2
8 g
F-16 aircraft pulling out of dive[citation needed ]
inertial
88 m/s2
9 g
Maximum for a fit, trained person with G-suit to keep consciousness, avoiding G-LOC [citation needed ]
inertial
88 – 118 m/s2
9 – 12 g
Typical maximum turn acceleration in an aerobatic plane or fighter jet[ 8]
10 2
1 hm/s2
inertial
147 m/s2
15 g
Explosive seat ejection from aircraft[citation needed ]
177 m/s2
18 g
Physical damage in humans like broken capillaries [ 3]
209 m/s2
21.3 g
Peak acceleration experienced by cosmonauts during the Soyuz 18a abort[ 9]
333 m/s2
34 g
Peak deceleration of the Stardust Sample Return Capsule on reentry to Earth[ 10]
454 m/s2
46.2 g
Maximum acceleration a human has survived on a rocket sled [ 3]
> 491 m/s2
> 50 g
Death or serious injury likely[citation needed ]
982 m/s2
100 g
Sprint missile [ 11]
982 m/s2
100 g
Automobile crash (100 km/h into wall)[ 12]
> 982 m/s2
> 100 g
Brief human exposure survived in crash[ 13]
982 m/s2
100 g
Deadly limit for most humans[citation needed ]
10 3
1 km/s2
inertial ≈ lab
1540 m/s2
157 g
Peak acceleration of fastest rocket sled run[ 14]
1964 m/s2
200 g
3.5" hard disc non-operating shock tolerance for 2 ms, weight 0.6 kg[ 15]
2098 m/s2
214 g
Highest recorded amount of g-force exposed and survived by a human (Peak deceleration experienced by Kenny Bräck in a crash at the 2003 Chevy 500 )[ 16] [ 17]
2256 m/s2
230 g
Peak acceleration experience by the Galileo probe during descent into Jupiter's atmosphere[ 18]
2490 m/s2
254 g
Peak deceleration experienced by Jules Bianchi in crash of Marussia MR03 , 2014 Japanese Grand Prix [ 19]
2946 m/s2
300 g
Soccer ball struck by foot[citation needed ]
3200 m/s2
320 g
A jumping human flea [ 20]
3800 m/s2
380 g
A jumping click beetle [ 21]
4944 m/s2
504 g
Clothes on washing machine, during dry spinning (46 cm drum / 1400 rpm)
10 4
10 km/s2
11 768 m/s2
1200 g
Deceleration of the head of a woodpecker [ 22]
17 680 m/s2
1800 g
Space gun with a barrel length of 1 km and a muzzle velocity of 6 km/s , as proposed by Quicklaunch (assuming constant acceleration)
29460 m/s2
3000 g
Baseball struck by bat[ 12]
~33 000 m/s2
3400 g
Standard requirement for decelerative crashworthiness in certified flight recorders (such as a Boeing 737 'black box')
>49 100 m/s2
>5000 g
Shock capability of mechanical wrist watches[ 23]
84 450 m/s2
8600 g
Current Formula One engines , maximum piston acceleration (up to 10,000 g before rev limits)[ 24]
10 5
100 km/s2
102 000 m/s2
10 400 g
A mantis shrimp punch[ 25]
152 210 m/s2
15 500 g
Rating of electronics built into military artillery shells[ 26]
196 400 m/s2
20 000 g
Spore acceleration of the Pilobolus fungi[ 27]
304 420 m/s2
31 000 g
9×19mm Parabellum handgun bullet (average along the length of the barrel)[citation needed ] [ 28]
10 6
1 Mm/s2
1 000 000 m/s2
100 000 g
Closing jaws of a trap-jaw ant [ 29]
1 865 800 m/s2
190 000 g
9×19mm Parabellum handgun bullet, peak[citation needed ] [ 30]
3 800 000 m/s2
390 000 g
Surface gravity of white dwarf Sirius B[ 31]
3 900 000 m/s2
slightly below 400 000 g
Ultracentrifuge [ 32]
10 7
10 Mm/s2
53 000 000 m/s2
5 400 000 g
Jellyfish stinger[ 33]
10 9
1 Gm/s2
1× 10 9 m/s2
~100 000 000 g
The record peak acceleration of a projectile in a coilgun , a 2 gram projectile accelerated in 1 cm from rest to 5 km/sec.[ 34]
10 12
1 Tm/s2
1× 10 12 to 1× 10 13 m/s2
1× 10 11 to 1× 10 12 g
Surface gravity of a neutron star [ 35]
2.1× 10 13 m/s2
2.1× 10 12 g
Protons in the Large Hadron Collider [ 36]
10 21
1 Zm/s2
9.149× 10 21 m/s2
9.33× 10 20 g
Classical (Bohr model ) acceleration of an electron around a 1 H nucleus.
1.76× 10 23 m/s2
1.79× 10 22 g
Electrons in a 1 TV/m wakefield accelerator [ 37]
10 51
1 QZm/s2
5.5608× 10 51 m/s2
5.5719× 10 50 g
Coherent Planck unit of acceleration
See also
References
^ Stanford University: Gravity Probe B, Payload & Spacecraft , and NASA: Investigation of Drag-Free Control Technology for Earth Science Constellation Missions . The TRIAD 1 satellite was a later, more advanced navigation satellite that was part of the U.S. Navy’s Transit , or NAVSAT system.
^ Gundlach, J. H; Schlamminger, S; Spitzer, C. D; Choi, K. -Y; Woodahl, B. A; Coy, J. J; Fischbach, E (2007). "Laboratory Test of Newton's Second Law for Small Accelerations" . Physical Review Letters . 98 (15): 150801. Bibcode :2007PhRvL..98o0801G . doi :10.1103/PhysRevLett.98.150801 . PMID 17501332 .
^ a b c d e csel.eng.ohio-state.edu - High Acceleration and the Human Body, Martin Voshell, November 28, 2004 Archived August 19, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
^ George Bibel. Beyond the Black Box: the Forensics of Airplane Crashes . Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008. ISBN 0-8018-8631-7 .
^ 6 g has been recorded in the 130R turn at Suzuka circuit, Japan. [1] Many turns have 5 g peak values, like turn 8 at Istanbul or Eau Rouge at Spa
^ "Archived copy" . Archived from the original on 2014-12-28. Retrieved 2014-12-14 .{{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link )
^ NASA: SP-368 Biomedical Results of Apollo, Chapter 5: Environmental Factors, Table 2: Apollo Manned Space Flight Reentry G Levels
^ "Maxed out: How many g s can you pull?" . New Scientist . Retrieved 2017-11-19 .
^ Hall, Rex; David Shayler (2003). Soyuz, A Universal Spacecraft . Springer Praxis. p. 193. ISBN 978-1-85233-657-8 .
^ ReVelle, D. O.; Edwards, W. N. (2007). "Stardust—An artificial, low-velocity "meteor" fall and recovery: 15 January 2006" . Meteoritics and Planetary Science . 42 (2): 271. Bibcode :2007M&PS...42..271R . doi :10.1111/j.1945-5100.2007.tb00232.x .
^ Sprint
^ a b tomshardware.co.uk - Hard Drive Shock Tolerance - Hard-Disks - Storage Archived 2012-06-17 at the Wayback Machine , Physics, by O'hanian, 1989, 2007-01-03
^ “Several Indy car drivers have withstood impacts in excess of 100 G without serious injuries.” Dennis F. Shanahan, M.D., M.P.H.: ”Human Tolerance and Crash Survivability [dead link ] , citing Society of Automotive Engineers. Indy racecar crash analysis. Automotive Engineering International, June 1999, 87–90. And National Highway Traffic Safety Administration: Recording Automotive Crash Event Data Archived 2010-04-05 at the Wayback Machine
^ "Holloman Air Force Base - Fact Sheet (Printable) : 846 TS HYPERSONIC UPGRADE PROGRAM" . Archived from the original on 2012-05-17. Retrieved 2015-04-19 .
^ wdc.com - Legacy Product Specifications : WD600BB Archived 2011-02-27 at the Wayback Machine , read 2012-01-11
^ "Archived copy" . Archived from the original on 2013-07-18. Retrieved 2013-07-23 .{{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link )
^ Feel the G's: The Science of Gravity and G-Forces - by Suzanne Slade (page 37)
^ Woodfill, Jerry. "What Did Galileo Find at Jupipter?" . er.jsc.nasa.gov . NASA. Retrieved 8 November 2019 .
^ "Formula 1 - Bianchi crash impact was 254g" . uk.eurosport.yahoo.com . 23 July 2015. Archived from the original on 23 July 2015.
^ Evans, M. E. G (2009). "The jump of the click beetle (Coleoptera, Elateridae)—a preliminary study". Journal of Zoology . 167 (3): 319– 336. doi :10.1111/j.1469-7998.1972.tb03115.x .
^ "Archived copy" (PDF) . Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2015-04-19 .{{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link )
^ S-H Yoon; S Park (17 January 2011). "A mechanical analysis of woodpecker drumming and its application to shock-absorbing systems" (PDF) . Bioinspiration & Biomimetics . 6 (1): 12. Bibcode :2011BiBi....6a6003Y . doi :10.1088/1748-3182/6/1/016003 . PMID 21245520 . S2CID 2510221 . Retrieved 10 January 2016 .
^ Omega [2] , Ball Watch Technology
^ Cosworth V8 engine
^ S. N. Patek, W. L. Korff & R. L. Caldwell (2004). "Deadly strike mechanism of a mantis shrimp" (PDF) . Nature . 428 (6985): 819– 820. Bibcode :2004Natur.428..819P . doi :10.1038/428819a . PMID 15103366 . S2CID 4324997 . [permanent dead link ]
^ "L-3 Communication's IEC Awarded Contract with Raytheon for Common Air Launched Navigation System" . Archived from the original on 2016-12-24. Retrieved 2016-12-12 .
^ bu.edu - Rockets in Horse Poop , 2010-12-10
^ Assuming an 8.04 gram bullet, a muzzle velocity of 350 metres per second (1,100 ft/s), and a 102 mm barrel.
^ Patek SN, Baio JE, Fisher BL, Suarez AV (22 August 2006). "Multifunctionality and mechanical origins: Ballistic jaw propulsion in trap-jaw ants" . Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences . 103 (34): 12787– 12792. Bibcode :2006PNAS..10312787P . doi :10.1073/pnas.0604290103 . PMC 1568925 . PMID 16924120 .
^ Assuming an 8.04 gram bullet, a peak pressure of 240 MPa (35,000 psi) and 440 N of friction.
^ Holberg, J. B.; Barstow, M. A.; Bruhweiler, F. C.; Cruise, A. M.; Penny, A. J. (1998). "Sirius B: A New, More Accurate View" . The Astrophysical Journal . 497 (2): 935– 942. Bibcode :1998ApJ...497..935H . doi :10.1086/305489 .
^ Berkeley Physics Course, vol. 1, Mechanics, fig. 4.1 (authors Kittel-Knight-Ruderman, 1973 edition)
^ Tibballs, J; Yanagihara, A. A; Turner, H. C; Winkel, K (2011). "Immunological and Toxinological Responses to Jellyfish Stings" . Inflammation & Allergy - Drug Targets . 10 (5): 438– 446. doi :10.2174/187152811797200650 . PMC 3773479 . PMID 21824077 .
^ K. McKinney and P. Mongeau, "Multiple stage pulsed induction acceleration," in IEEE Transactions on Magnetics, vol. 20, no. 2, pp. 239-242, March 1984, doi: 10.1109/TMAG.1984.1063089.
^ Haensel, Paweł; Potekhin, Alexander Y.; Yakovlev, Dmitry G. (2007). Neutron Stars . Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-33543-8 .
^ Calculated from their speed and radius, approximating the LHC as a circle.
^ Rosenzweig, J. B; Andonian, G; Bucksbaum, P; Ferrario, M; Full, S; Fukusawa, A; Hemsing, E; Hidding, B; Hogan, M; Krejcik, P; Muggli, P; Marcus, G; Marinelli, A; Musumeci, P; O'Shea, B; Pellegrini, C; Schiller, D; Travish, G (2011). "Teravolt-per-meter beam and plasma fields from low-charge femtosecond electron beams". Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research A . 653 (1): 98. arXiv :1002.1976 . Bibcode :2011NIMPA.653...98R . doi :10.1016/j.nima.2011.01.073 . S2CID 118384500 .