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This is a question Pointless Experiments

Pavlov's Frog writes: I once spent 20 minutes with my eyes closed to see what it was like being blind. I smashed my knee on the kitchen cupboard, and decided I'd be better off deaf as you can still watch television.

(, Thu 24 Jul 2008, 12:00)
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Mosquitoes in the Rain
Many years ago I walked into the backyard at night to enjoy a smoke. It began raining pretty hard but I didn't seek shelter. A few minutes later a mosquito bit me. I was amazed. How in the hell could a mosquito fly around in the rain? Surely falling raindrops would instantly ground a flying mosquito.

I pondered the problem and realized the truth might be surprising. I cut a foot square of light-colored cardboard and put it in the rain for ten seconds. Then I counted the rain drops that had hit the square. I realized even if the square was entirely covered with drops, that's only two-dimensions which is deceptive. It was invalid to imagine each raindrop as a column of water through which a mosquito couldn't fly. For the rain to hit a mosquito the drop and the mosquito would have to be in the same place at the same time, which is extremely unlikely. Imagine taking a 3D snapshot of a cubic foot of air space during a rain. How many drop-sized points are there in the space? Tens of thousands. How many of those spots would contain a drop of rain at any given moment? Not many. It looked like a mosquito being hit by a drop of rain would be the exception rather than the rule.

Then I had another realization. Each drop pushes the air in front of it out of its path as it falls. A flying mosquito is likely to be pushed aside by the air in front of a falling rain drop rather than be hit, even if a drop would have hit it. Similarly a butterfly is often pushed aside from your windshield as you drive rather than being hit.

I convinced myself that in general mosquitoes can fly through the rain unhindered.
(, Mon 28 Jul 2008, 20:18, 6 replies)
yes but
are those african or european mosquitos?
(, Mon 28 Jul 2008, 20:27, closed)
And
what is the air speed velocity of an unladen mosquito?
(, Mon 28 Jul 2008, 23:05, closed)
Yep
You are correct, the rain drop creates a presssure wave as it falls and it pushes the mozzie out of the way.
(, Tue 29 Jul 2008, 9:38, closed)
totally pointless
well done.
(, Tue 29 Jul 2008, 12:32, closed)
How many
Mosquitoes would you need before they could carry the weight of a coconut?
(, Wed 30 Jul 2008, 11:05, closed)
Maybe if you got two mosquitos
and hung the coconut on a string between them...
(, Wed 30 Jul 2008, 18:38, closed)

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