Although cats rarely obey human commands, scientists have discovered that cats do obey the law of physics.

n 1969, TR Kane and MP Scher of Stanford University, in California, published A Dynamical Explanation of the Falling Cat Phenomenon, which is one of the few studies about cats ever published in the International Journal of Solids and Structures. Kane and Scher explain:

“It is well known that falling cats usually land on their feet and, moreover, that they can manage to do so even if released from complete rest while upside-down … numerous attempts have been made to discover a relatively simple mechanical system whose motion, when proceeding in accordance with the laws of dynamics, possesses the salient features of the motion of the falling cat. The present paper constitutes such an attempt.”

Rather than toss cats in the air and watch how they fall, the scientists created a mathematical abstraction of a cat using two imaginary cylinder-like chunks, joined at a single point so the parts could (as with a feline spine) bend, but not twist. Using a computer to plot the theoretical bendings of this theoretical falling chunky-cat, the motions resembled old photographs of an actual falling cat.

The next time you see your cat falling to the ground, you can be heartened to know that cats must always obey the law of physics. Now if you can just get your cat to obey you once in a while, you’ll be all set, but that’s a topic hat even the world’s best scientists can’t crack just yet.

Read more here.

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