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January
17
Filed under:
Design
Infographic

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Comments (157)

Comments

January
18
3:59 am
John Thai wrote:

haha. I love this.

January
18
5:28 am
Timon wrote:

That is awesome. I’ve taken the liberty of linking to Empire’s Shark Attack 3 fan page. They live for this film and similar ilk.

http://www.empireonline.com/forum/tm.asp?m=1139&mpage=187&key=&NID=0#2624787

January
18
7:45 am
philbonnell wrote:

I’m slightly skeptical about the 709.2 km figure. Have you and professor Nals taken into account gravity, friction and other possible environmental factors (wind, precipitation, the rotation of the earth), or are we assuming Mega Shark lives in some kind of fanciful vacuum world?

January
18
12:51 pm
Aron Rubin wrote:

Clearly the shark had jumped the movie at that point. Perhaps the shark would have more lead time if it used crazy long range electric field sensing and known flight path. Also a hyper improbability drive may have been involved but where are the petunias?
http://www.hizook.com/blog/2010/01/14/bode-plots-fish-awesome-electric-field-sensing-fish
You may want to consider how fast a shark’s tail would have to be moving considering how inefficient the tail is for forward thrust.

January
18
4:18 pm
pokstad wrote:

FYI, there’s a typo on the PDF, ‘irst’ instead of ‘first’.

January
18
6:24 pm
Stivo wrote:

@JT <3 haha

@ philbonnell: Unfortunately those factors weren’t taken into account. I’m guessing there would be the need for some drag calculations and wind resistance. Which really, makes Mega Shark all the more badass for overcoming such obstacles!

@Timon: Thanks for the link out

@Aron Rubin: Those are some badass fish. God help us should they ever become ‘Mega’

@pokstad: Thanks for the catch! I’ve updated the PDF.

January
18
8:47 pm
The Physics of Mega Shark « Oceanographer’s Choice Pingback

[...] Remember Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus? A designer named Stephen Taubman (website) has made a wonderful infographic explaining just how Mega Shark was able to take out that airliner. Click on the image below for a larger version. An even larger PDF is available at the original blog post. [...]

January
18
9:14 pm
uberVU - social comments Trackback

Social comments and analytics for this post…

This post was mentioned on Twitter by stevietat: *BOOM* Mega Shark Infographic posted. http://bit.ly/5aZZ0s #megashark #infographic…

January
19
1:03 am
rolandha wrote:

cool infographic!

only problem: the increase of weight is not linear. you have a volumetric problem here.
twice the size means 2^3 times the volume.
and if mass/volume relation is the same than weight increases by 2^3.
this means a megashark’s weight is 824t.

ps: if you do the same calculation for the megalodon you would get a weight of 220t. that means that mass/volume relation of megalodon is not the same as for the great shark (actually only half).

taking this into accout for megasharks would still mean a weight of 412t.

January
19
3:19 am
JGV wrote:

There’s still one more thing not accounted for: when megashark first spies the plane, he must be aware of the refraction coefficient: while he sees the plane in a diagonal straight line, the plane is much more away, since the diagonal line over the water is much more close to ground that it appears to him.

But that’s a small hurdle for a shark that can calculate parabolic trajectories in realtime, anyway… :-D

January
19
4:55 am
James DoubleYa wrote:

Your Shark Size is incorrect!
Jumbo Jet is 70m long – the shark appears to be TWICE the size of the aircraft at biting point.
Which roughly makes the shark about 140m long.
Nice PDF though caused a stir in the office Ha!!

January
19
5:21 am
David wrote:

Impressive! A great infographic for an immortal film. Thanks Stephen, thanks Debbie and eternal glory to Asylum Prods.

January
19
5:21 am
MegaTrout wrote:

Funny as hell :-D

Just one thing: you’re insulting the MegaShark by saying it weighs a vulgar amount of 240 tons. Relative to the size of a great white, and provided that density and overall structure of the different sharks remain similar, then the megashark is nothing close to 240t, no no no… don’t dare to say so. It weighs around 2074 tons!!!

newWeight = (scaleFactor ^ 3) * oldWeight

Bow down to the MegaShark. It’s showing you mercy right now by allowing you to live.

January
19
5:40 am
Mega Shark Infografik – Openmedi Pingback

[...] Hier zum Artikel. [...]

January
19
6:26 am
Feezge wrote:

Good job Stivo !

Is somebody want to become the Mega “airplanes kicker” Shark ?!

Enjoy : http://www.onemorelevel.com/game/miami_shark

January
19
6:31 am
Grimster wrote:

In the clip the airplane is clearly at cruising altitude and above the clouds, putting it at an above sea level elevation of more like 10,000 meters. Around 33,000 to 35,000 feet is the typical cruising altitude of such a large plane. So mega-shark would need to travel at a LOT faster than 700km/h to reach theplane.

My theory is (not having seen the movie) is that once out of the water he flaps his fins like a hummingbird, generating lift with his fins and tail.

January
19
8:13 am
PK wrote:

Excellent infographic, however, I’m concerned that it doesn’t take into consideration the issues of free falling mass and water displacement upon landing.

January
19
8:46 am
Twitted by bernardcrowshit Pingback

[...] This post was Twitted by bernardcrowshit [...]

January
19
9:28 am
Eric Haidara wrote:

Excellent infographic.
I just hope I never fly with Condor Airlines….

January
19
11:54 am
¿De verdad puede un tiburón gigante atrapar un avión? (¿existe alguien que pueda creer esto?) « miqueblog Pingback

[...] de vosotros vio el tráiler de la película Megashark vs Giant Octopusver aquí). Al infografista Stephen Taubman la escena le pareció tan friqui y disparatada como a nosotros y decidió recrear las condiciones [...]

January
19
12:49 pm
Mega Shark « Argodyne Heavy Industries Pingback

[...] Stephen Taubman. Share this [...]

January
19
2:16 pm
Alabak2002 wrote:

All your calculations are wrog. Since the man sees the shark coming from the side, it’s pretty obvious the shark jumps in some sort of parabolic trajectory… X->

January
19
4:58 pm
Jenni wrote:

This is amazing, I love it to bits.

I would like to know if you’ve considered a infographic on the whole colour-mixing = chemistry segment of the movie?

January
19
6:24 pm
January
19
7:13 pm
Stivo wrote:

Wow, thanks for the feedback everyone. It looks like next time I might need to outsource the calculations portion to those with more physics know-how :)

@Jenni: Interesting idea, I’ll have to re-watch the movie for that part and see if there’s any good material to work with.

January
19
9:21 pm
josh wrote:

“majestic, yet deadly creature” -attenborough right there

January
20
7:16 am
Dack wrote:

Mega-shark is a good guy…! He will not crash the plane…. :P

January
20
11:06 am
Vindication | theasylum.cc Pingback

[...] Wednesday, January 20th, 2010 @ 11:06 am | Headline, News, Other, Releases This is perhaps the coolest reference about one of our movies I’ve ever seen … yes, even [...]

January
20
11:58 am
David Latt wrote:

You forgot to carry the ’1′, but otherwise the math is solid.

Honestly, I think you spent more time on this chart then we did making the movie. But this was the best site yet on our little film. AWESOME!!!

Mega Thanks,
David
(Producer, MEGA SHARK VS. GIANT OCTOPUS)

January
21
1:38 am
Ninja Dixon wrote:

haha! great :D

I will print this and use it as a poster!

January
21
3:27 am
Timon wrote:

How about an inforgraphic on whether a man could survive riding a jet ski down a Megaladon’s throat?

See Shark Attack 3: Megaladon

I forsee an entire series of C-grade monster movie infographics.

January
21
6:44 am
Beth wrote:

This is fabulous. You are my favorite person for today.

January
21
7:05 am
Carlos Martins wrote:

Well, I don’t think those 700Km/h would be an issue: if I recall correctly at some point in the movie they say the Shark is approaching at supersonic speeds or something.
(But I was fastforwarding through it at that time, so I might be recalling it wrong… ;)

January
21
9:09 am
VizThink Blog » Blog Archive » VizLinks | Visual Thinking Bookmarks for January 20th Pingback

[...] Infographic: Mega Shark « Stivo’s Blog – Hehe – a guy makes an infographic to attempt to explain how the Mega Shark, from Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus manages to take down an airplane. [...]

January
21
10:09 am
Antonio wrote:

A couple of additional issues.

JGV wrote that the refraction cause the plane to appear closer than actually it is, but it is more difficult. Above a specific angle given by snell law (near 45 degrees between water and air), water surface performs like a mirror and Megashark cannot see the plane. So it had to be about several km deep to see the plane. This is tough, even for Megashark.

The other issue is that in the movie megashark seems to bite the aircraft from below it. But at that moment, the speed of the plane is 800 km/h and the shark is stopping its vertical movement, so it should be the plane quickly entering the shark mouth and not the shark reaching it.

Congratulations for your infography that is letting us to enjoy for a while!

January
22
1:30 am
Lec 1 | 8.01 Physics I: Classical Mechanics, Fall 1999 | AboutPhysics.info Pingback

[...] Infographic: Mega Shark « Stivo's Blog [...]

January
22
4:49 pm
girl wrote:

As a big fan of this film, I’m sorry to break some bad news to you, which throws off your whole infographic. The plane wasn’t at Cloud level. This bit takes place in San Francisco, and as a current resident, I think you mistook our abnormally poor summer weather for clouds. :/

January
23
11:08 am
Film is Pwn » Mega Shark Eating a Plane Mid-Flight = Plausible? Pingback

[...] to this web-site, the classic scene from our favorite B-movie Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus is entirely, [...]

January
24
12:35 pm
santa wrote:

For all the Porn-Without-Any-Sex action movie admirers (like those masterpieces from Asylum and other Z films), I recommend an old “classic” Iron Master (La guerra del ferro – Ironmaster (1983)) !

Cheers from Sarajevo, Bosnia
Santa

January
24
12:40 pm
santa wrote:

Sorry, I forget to say that a like your infographic !
Santa

January
26
7:51 am
Misternny wrote:

love this!

January
27
10:31 am
Infogreatness & Studio Spaceness « rpInterns: Lessons & Experiments Pingback

[...] Here’s a little snippet from one of my favorites (Mega Shark): [...]

January
27
10:59 am
David Barclay wrote:

Stivo – very well done.

db

January
27
4:55 pm
Adam wrote:

Any plans to make this into a poster? I know some friends who would kill for one.

January
28
9:55 am
Megashark vs The Plane. « Guacamole Terrorists Pingback

[...] Source.   [...]

January
28
10:05 am
Danny wrote:

This may well be my favorite infographic of all time, I wouldn´t worry about the science being off, seeing as infographics are generally just skewed to portay whatever the editors want, in this case megashark defying everthing to get that damn plane that drops frozen poop into his ocean. Completely feasable, A+, and please make more.

January
28
6:02 pm
The physics behind Mega Shark | Nilesh Babu Pingback

[...] to Stephen Taubman for the infographic. Share and [...]

January
29
7:18 pm
Fred wrote:

We’re actually having a discussion about this on my Niven group, and how the shark needs to launch itself at an angle in the direction of flight of the airliner to match velocities, but facing toward the airliner, meaning he either flips in mid jump or is coming backwards out of the water like Flipper, and this increases his take off speed to transonic when he breeches the surface – kaBOOM!

We’ve been having fun with this in several venues all day. Thanks!

January
31
11:23 pm
Rosscott wrote:

I’m posting about this on my site. Amazing.

January
31
11:28 pm
Rosscott, Inc. » Archive » Mega Shark: The Infographic Pingback

[...] Here at Rosscott, Inc. we’ve had a real boner for infographics lately. Let today be no exception. Graphic designer (and fellow infographic lover) Stephen “Stivo” Taubman has created an infographic that depicts all the statistical and visual detail necessary to recreate the famous scene in the smash hit Mega Shark Vs. Giant Octopus where the mega shark jumps out of the water and eats the plane near the Golden Gate Bridge. When I saw this, I thought of my friends in tropical Madison, WI at Tank Riot, who I know love them some Mega Shark action.  LINK. [...]

February
1
3:19 am
WP Themes wrote:

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February
1
1:34 pm
Caldwing wrote:

Ok I actually did some calculations on this back when I first saw this incredible movie. I have revisited my calculations and come to some surprising conclusions.

As has been mentioned the true altitude of the aircraft would be about 10000 m, this is the value I used. The mass of the shark has been -woefully- underestimated however. I would agree with the assessment that the shark is about 140 m long. The largest great white ever caught was 6.4 m and about 3300 kg. increasing mass as the cube this gives us a weight of over 34000 kg. This makes sense since the shark is clearly the size of a large ocean going vessel, the likes of which routinely reach this discplacement.

When velocity is calculated in a vacuum however the mass of the shark is of course inconsequential. Using simple acceleration due to gravity the shark would have to be traveling at about 443 m/s, almost 1600 km/h, to reach this height.

Now the real surprise came when I went to try a rudimentary calculation of atmospheric friction. I used the standard drag formula, assuming the cross-sectional diameter of the shark moving head on to be about 30 m, and the area roughly circular. The coefficient of drag for sharks is actually very low, as discovered by my friend. I gave him a Cd of 0.1, allowing that his mouth is open. At sea-level, just as he leaves the water, the force due to air friction would be about 8.4 million Newtons. However, due to the incredible mass of the shark, this translates into only 0.244 m/s of vertical deceleration.

Now, although a true recalculation of required velocity would require more calculus then I care to bother with since the air friction will be constantly changing as altitude increases and velocity decreases, a quick estimate tells us that very little has changed. Even if that level of friction was constant, the deceleration would only increase from 9.81 m/s/s to 10.054 m/s/s, resulting in a final required velocity of about 449 m/s

This seems very counter-intuitive for me, and I still suspect I have gone wrong somewhere, but I cannot see where. I was expecting the air resistance to be totally insurmountable. But even a large increase in the drag coefficient would only bring the required velocity to… oh maybe over 500 m/s. If anyone has any thoughts or can point out obvious errors they would be welcome.

Of course, even getting to this speed underwater in the first place is a whole other ball of wax.

February
1
10:43 pm
Jay Fallon wrote:

I liked it so much I used it for a Haml and Sass exercise I’m doing for TeachMeToCode.com. You can see it here:

http://megashark.heroku.com/

February
3
3:56 am
WP Themes wrote:

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February
4
9:48 am
giant pink shark! « statistics are ART Pingback

[...] discovered this over at Stivo via Cool Infographics. Stephen Taubman, the writer of Stivo, apparently watched Mega Shark vs. [...]

February
4
9:29 pm
Brent wrote:

I’m going to give you this blank cheque. Write down any amount of money, and I will pay it in return for a full size print…

February
5
2:18 am
Megashark, cuestión de física | Pisito en Madrid Pingback

[...] Pues alguien, como suele pasar en Internet, fue más allá. Se trata de Stephen Taubman, un conocido de la infografía que ni corto ni perezoso quedó con un amigo físico para recrear [...]

February
5
4:18 am
Pablo Renato wrote:

No now – let’s take it easy.

We can’t be sure about your explanation untill solid peer review.

February
8
12:30 pm
Infographic: Mega Shark « vince.degeorge Pingback

[...] February 8, 2010 via staubman.com [...]

February
13
4:48 am
Mega Shark Infographic : Forest and the Trees Pingback

[...] Megashark infographic [...]

February
13
5:03 am
Doug Marttila wrote:

This is awesome. I would buy a poster if you made them available.

February
16
5:46 pm
matt wrote:

YOU WANT A POSTER? You have a vector PDF, so with Stephen’s permission you could blow it up to whatever size you wanted to and order a print yourself – somewhere like posterbrain.com

February
19
12:14 am
How a Giant Shark Took Down an Airplane | FlowingData Pingback

[...] This graphic from designer Stephen Taubman is entertaining in so many ways. It is based on the amazing story of Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus, one of the greatest movies ever made. I've never seen it, but after you watch the clip below, you'll be running to find a copy. [...]

February
19
9:01 am
Beanboy wrote:

Meh, shark looks a lot bigger than 240 feet. I’d say at least 300+ plus based on the size of it versus the plane. And wasn’t the plane coming in for a landing?

Good god I can’t believe I am posting this, hehe.

February
22
3:53 am
February
22
11:59 am
Weekend of Feb 20 « Around Teh Table Pingback

[...] played out, and she got almost everything dead-on. Also, there are apparently people nerdy enough to work out the physics of how a Mega Shark could jump out of the water and eat a plane. Oh, Internet, how I love [...]

February
22
12:38 pm
Mega Shark Infographic - Unlikely Words - A blog of Boston, Providence, and the world Pingback

[...] Shark vs Giant Octopus was an awful movie and bad science is just one of the reasons. To clarify, the mega shark would have had to swim 710 KM/H to jump high [...]

February
22
12:57 pm
Random Infographic Pingback

[...] I am not the only one to have wondered if the above video is somehow possible. Found on stubman.com this infographic finally answers my qestion of how the Mega shark plane attack in 2009’s Mega [...]

February
22
10:07 pm
How a Giant Shark Took Down an Airplane « WebGlide - Data-Visualization Pingback

[...] The Achievement Gap in American Education »How a Giant Shark Took Down an AirplaneThis graphic from designer Stephen Taubman is entertaining in so many ways. It is based on the amazing story of [...]

February
25
5:01 am
Mega shark VS. Giant Octopus « À brûle-pourpoint. Pingback

[...] Et en bonus : une petite explication physique. [...]

February
25
9:42 am
Marvin wrote:

hi stephen, that’s pretty awesome stuff! i like so much …

February
26
1:59 am
Ghedji wrote:

This just made my night! Great job!

February
26
12:58 pm
Mega Shark’s vertical propulsion explained in an infographic | Doobybrain.com Pingback

[...] sort it all out, Stephen Taubman created this infographic with precise measurements as to how fast the shark must go and high it [...]

February
28
2:11 am
Podria un tiburon gigante capturar un avion? Pingback

[...] de tiburon gigante, logra salir del agua y alcanzar un avion de pasajeros. Y bien, como a muchos, a Stephen Taubman le parecio una escena tan loca y friki, que hizo la siguiente [...]

February
28
9:15 am
Infographics go wild | Big Wide World Pingback

[...] This infographic illustrates how a giant shark could eat a plane (via Flowing Data) [...]

March
3
12:42 pm
Geheimnis des Mega Sharks aufgedeckt. | Kotzendes Einhorn Pingback

[...] Stephen Taubman hat nun eine Infografik erstellt, die die Physik des Angriffs erklärt. Und Hölle, der Hai muss ungefähr 709,2 Kmh schnell gewesen sein. Aber seht selbst: [...]

March
4
6:54 am
March
4
4:12 pm
Eitan wrote:

I feel like the infographic and humorous language are highly disrespectful of the victims and their families. Leave it to bloggers and comment trolls to be so insensitive, what have we come to?!

March
4
4:40 pm
The physics behind flying sharks who can destroy airplanes | dv8-designs Pingback

[...] destroy a plane, and (b) generate enough power to fly in the air and reach that plane? Fortunately, the Interweb has someone who can explain all that for us. The greatest infographic of all time, one that both Edward Tufte and Nancy Duarte would have [...]

March
4
5:09 pm
Riesiger Hai? Gigantischer Oktopus? Völliger Irrsinn? Jepp! Pingback

[...] und völlig überzogen, ABER es lässt sich natürlich erklären. Und hier hat Stephen Taubman ganze Arbeit geleistet und eine Infografik zusammengeschraubt, die der DVD beiliegen [...]

March
4
5:17 pm
LoopyGLemon wrote:

I would just like to add that the stewardess in the clip is asking passengers to put their seats in the upright position indicating that they are on approach for landing. Since they are descending this makes it much more plausible that mega shark can jump up and eat them.

March
4
5:49 pm
Jon wrote:

I tried to do some math to figure out the speed it could be traveling at, when it landed back in the water, and my calculator blew up. I got as far as it would be traveling over 400mph.

I think it would leave a crater, if it doesn’t burn up, in the atmosphere. Mmmm, shark steak.

March
4
6:09 pm
The physics behind flying sharks who can destroy airplanes | The World Matters Pingback

[...] destroy a plane, and (b) generate enough power to fly in the air and reach that plane? Fortunately, the Interweb has someone who can explain all that for us. The greatest infographic of all time, one that both Edward Tufte and Nancy Duarte would have [...]

March
4
7:08 pm
Mary wrote:

Do you think the collateral damage of whales, subs and squid might hinder the acceleration somewhat? Have you taken into account the varying sea-life densities of different sections of ocean?

March
4
9:19 pm
aeiou wrote:

Apart from the total ridiculousness of a shark of this size jumping that high out of the water at such a speed there’s one factor that’s missing here: the shark would have to be able to spot the plane from a distance of 10km from underwater!!! Those must be incredible accurate eyes! It also must have an interest for attacking a plane that far away (like: “Uh, what’s that black spot up there? Wanna eat!). And last not least: it must possess some incredible talents for aiming at something that small and far away and actually hitting it… aeiou

PS: besides that I’ve seen the movie and it was the first movie I’ve ever watched where I afterwards thought that I could have done something more worthwhile with my time…

March
4
9:21 pm
aeiou wrote:

aaaaaand: it must also be able to survive the impact when hitting the surface of the water again. it s just plain crazy…

PPS: your info-graphic is 1000 times more entertaining than the movie, btw…

March
4
10:05 pm
Mal Chia wrote:

Thanks! My friends have been asking me this for ages. Now I can finally give them an answer!

March
5
2:29 am
moth wrote:

Thanks for the YouTube clip, and for setting us straight that it couldn’t really happen. Love the editing of the take down, funny. Assuming the octopus part isn’t as good or you would show us that too.

March
5
6:40 am
Greatest movie clip ever… « Travels with Shiloh Pingback

[...] then follow this link to the infographic to unlock the scientific mystery that allows a shark to take down a [...]

March
5
7:42 am
hx wrote:

really nice infographic!

what program did you use

March
5
12:52 pm
Mega Shark Attack on Airplane Explained by Physics | Disinformation Pingback

[...] But here’s the real life physics behind it (click here). Stephen Tauban writes on his blog: Last year, I discovered the wonderfully cheezy and sharky movie: Mega Shark Vs. Giant Octopus. [...]

March
5
2:03 pm
links for 2010-03-05 | Grant Watson Pingback

[...] Infographic: Mega Shark « Stivo's Blog Humorous Infographic (tags: cool design humour illustration infographics) [...]

March
5
3:04 pm
Scott Devine wrote:

Hey Stivo,

Absolutely love the infographic of this. And I know a little about “Shark” movies as I’m the writer (or “hack” as some people put it) of the SHARK ATTACK films. I would die to see a similar graphic on any of the stuff from my flicks (maybe shooting a Meg with a torpedo while it chomps a mini-sub).

Anyway, keep up the good work…some great stuff here.

Scott

March
6
9:14 am
Jeff Byrnes wrote:

Awesome. Just totally awesome.

March
7
2:11 pm
Lazy Monday Linkfest – Charismatic Megafauna Edition « Flocking101 Pingback

[...] where was I? Oh, yes. A talented individual named Stephen Taubman asked himself, what would it take for a Mega Shark to be able to perform this seemingly impossible [...]

March
7
2:27 pm
Google Facts and Figures – News « Switched On Media Pingback

[...] whole heap just released from Pingdom.  Interesting, but not as interesting as the Infographic on Mega Shark (big [...]

March
8
1:13 am
Mega Shark vs. Airplane infographic - Fashion and T-Shirt Blog Pingback

[...] Stephen Taubman created this infographic explaining how the Mega Shark could take out a plane, and put it on sale at Zazzle. Via. [...]

March
8
9:02 am
The physics behind flying sharks who can destroy airplanes — cathyoconnorsblog Pingback

[...] destroy a plane, and (b) generate enough power to fly in the air and reach that plane? Fortunately, the Interweb has someone who can explain all that for us. The greatest infographic of all time, one that both Edward Tufte and Nancy Duarte would have [...]

March
10
7:51 am
March
10
12:24 pm
It’s Science! « Not So Fast Pingback

[...] March 10, 2010 · Leave a Comment How Mega-Shark can take down an airliner at 6000′. [...]

March
11
4:38 am
La ciencia del Mega Tiburón [ENG] Pingback

[...] La ciencia del Mega Tiburón [ENG]  staubman.com/blog/?p=67  por Nylo hace 2 segundos [...]

March
11
6:03 am
March
12
4:51 am
Infographics in the classroom « NspireD2: Learning Technology @ Notre Dame Pingback

[...] “infographic” by Stephen Taubman. Based on a cheesy 2009 sci-fi flick, Taubman’s Mega Shark poster explains the physics of an enormous creature leaping out of the ocean and bringing down an [...]

March
12
12:08 pm
Richard Cardwell wrote:

If the plane is traveling at 600km an hour, in the twenty seconds the Mega Shark takes to reach its target the plane has traveled 20km. I suspect the Shark can in some way use its fins to provide extra lift and allow some limited gliding ability. This would explain the flatter trajectory and sideways approach demonstrated by the Mega Shark.

March
15
12:02 pm
Mega shark vs giant octupus:plane attack? « Churchmice (3 Pastor’s Kids) Pingback

[...] le in the ocean! And kill tons of fish!   To see how: Go to Mega shark infographic by clicking HERE  To watch the mega shark vs giant octopus trailer [...]

March
15
6:56 pm
Moe Lane » #rsrh The glorious Mega Shark vs Giant Octopus plane attack infographic. Pingback

[...] Mega Shark vs Giant Octopus – and who could forget such a post as that? – here is the greatest infographic that you will read [...]

March
15
7:24 pm
James Cloninger wrote:

I would just like to add that the stewardess in the clip is asking passengers to put their seats in the upright position indicating that they are on approach for landing. Since they are descending this makes it much more plausible that mega shark can jump up and eat them.

I agree. Storm clouds don’t get up to 30,000. More than likely, the plane was no higher than, say, 10,ooo feet…maybe, and descending on approach vector.

March
15
7:54 pm
bfwebster wrote:

Damn, I love the interwebs.

Brilliantly done infographic; Tufte would be proud.

As for the shark jumping — y’all are forgetting the MST3K Mantra. ..bruce..

March
16
9:35 pm
Megashark Infographic: Shark vs. Airliner « Happy Friday the 13th! Pingback

[...] Megashark Infographic: Shark vs. Airliner FANTASTIC! [...]

March
16
10:01 pm
March
17
5:56 am
TDWard wrote:

Best thing I have ever seen. I want this on a t-shirt and a poster…ON CANVAS

March
17
8:59 pm
woodythesingingcowboy wrote:

I will gladly stipulate to the first part of the shark aiming, acquiring enough speed, and even reaching the plane.

What I wonder, and where the graphic stops short, is how does the shark survive what will have to be awkward decent followed by a high speed impact with the surface of the water. The shark doesn’t look sleek enough to pierce the waters surface so it would seem likely that its survival would be “iffy” at best.

March
24
2:44 pm
Megashark « Jakob Svane Knudsens blog Pingback

[...] awesomeness spawned by this movie is a great little infographic made by Stephen Taubman, explaining how Megashark is able to pull of the amazing stunt seen in the above clip. He has also [...]

March
24
2:49 pm
Megashark vs. Giant Octopus « Jakob Svane Knudsens blog Pingback

[...] awesomeness spawned by this movie is a great little infographic made by Stephen Taubman, explaining how Megashark is able to pull of the amazing stunt seen in the above clip. He has also [...]

March
25
2:43 am
Megashark vs. Giant Octopus « Blog of Jakob Svane Knudsen Pingback

[...] awesomeness spawned by this movie is a great little infographic made by Stephen Taubman, explaining how Megashark is able to pull of the amazing stunt seen in the above clip. He has also [...]

April
2
7:05 pm
AdamGee wrote:

Awesome infographic!

April
5
2:12 pm
infographic « Raif Ceyhun Sahin Pingback

[...] source [...]

April
7
9:33 am
Molly Cameron | I thanks to enjoy your bicycle life. Pingback

[...] is a MEGA SHARK! infografic for you to enjoy. I too watched as Deborah Gibson negotiated her way around a [...]

April
7
11:57 am
Megashark in phsyikalischen Massstäben « 11k2 Pingback

[...] (staubman) (thx² an leser-der-ersten-stunde sickfile) (pic: click > noch grösser) [...]

April
8
4:33 am
The Food Chain, Revised Pingback

[...] of predation, and one cannot help but wonder at the omission of such obvious threats as robots, Mega Shark, or [...]

April
9
7:00 pm
The Food Chain, Revised « eggtea.com Pingback

[...] of predation, and one cannot help but wonder at the omission of such obvious threats as robots, Mega Shark, or [...]

April
13
2:37 pm
Link Mezza Plate #10 » A Meaningful Life - Marc Lehmann’s Blog Pingback

[...] non-porn Tech Zealots Inforgraphic: Megashark Without civil liberties, government is just a criminal racket The secret to great work is great [...]

April
15
7:22 pm
christian louboutin wrote:

and one cannot help but wonder at the omission of such obvious threats as robots, Mega Shark, or

April
28
8:01 am
10 Awesome Movie Infographics | High-Def Digest: The Bonus View Pingback

[...] to the ludicrous scene that this is based on).  This infrographic comes from Stephen Taubmann (website here) and is simply beautiful.  click the picture below to see the full infographic in PDF [...]

May
17
2:59 am
Mega Shark vs. Airplane « According to Hoss Pingback

[...] Shark vs. Airplane 17 May 2010 tags: infographic, mega shark by Joshua Hostetter This graphic from designer Stephen Taubman is quite entertaining. It is based on the amazing story of Mega Shark [...]

May
19
2:41 pm
elville wrote:

woodythesingingcowboy–

Terminal velocity for a 34000 kg shark with a cross-section of about 320 sq m and drag coefficient of .2 (<– falling sidelong) is only, hmmmm… 83 m/s? Even diving snoutfirst, with a coefficient of .1 , Mega Shark would only reach maybe 118 m/s before splashdown.

I haven't calculated the impact, but since Mega Shark shrugs off salt water at 500 m/s, I think re-entry would barely tickle. He just got hit in the face with a plane, which is probably more of an issue.

June
15
12:14 am
Women's Handbags wrote:

I think re-entry would barely tickle. He just got hit in the face with a plane, which is probably more of an issue.

July
12
7:01 pm
jack wrote:

This is amazing..

July
17
6:43 pm
How a Giant Shark Took Down an Airplane : Death In The Skies | teknology Pingback

[...] This &#103raphic f&#114&#111m designe&#114 Stephen &#84&#97ubm&#97n is &#101nt&#101&#114tainin&#103 in s&#111 many ways. &#73t is bas&#101d &#111n th&#101 amazin&#103 st&#111&#114y &#111f Mega &#83hark vs. Giant Octopus, on&#101 of &#116h&#101 gr&#101a&#116&#101s&#116 movi&#101s &#101v&#101r mad&#101. I’v&#101 n&#101v&#101r s&#101&#101n i&#116, bu&#116 af&#116&#101r you wa&#116ch &#116h&#101 clip b&#101low, you’ll b&#101 running &#116o find a copy. [...]

August
1
3:12 am
Rags 'n Ram » The story of the Mega Shark Pingback

[...] Taubman over at Stivo made this Infographic alongside his post. Quite interesting, worth the time reading (including the [...]

August
9
12:19 pm
The Vast Jeff Wing Conspiracy Pingback

[...] A large number of my friends have waxed rhapsodic over that fine piece of filmic literature, Mega Shark Vs. Giant Octopus. I have not yet seen it, but on the theory that everyone needs to know what the launch speed of an ocean-going shark needs to be in order to take down a commercial plane, I hereby link to this explanatory graphic. [...]

August
12
12:51 pm
Paul Tomblin wrote:

Wait a second! The flight attendant is going around telling people to put their seat backs up – that means pre-landing checks, which means the plane isn’t at cruising altitude any more. Maybe the shark only jumped 10,000 feet instead of 40,000?

August
21
8:23 am
james wrote:

HOLLY SMOKES! that was a crazy move from the giant shark!

September
9
5:30 pm
hannah wrote:

i hope i dont get eaton

September
28
4:09 pm
Maltese Problems wrote:

mega shark rocks

Congratulations

October
5
11:29 am
Spider-Dan wrote:

this is rad! do you have any information on MECCA SHARK though?

October
12
3:38 pm
roo7ad wrote:

goooooooooooooooooood thank you
روح ابو ظبي
مافيني

November
11
5:54 am
Phil wrote:

We spotted Mega Shark down our toilet today.

November
15
2:50 pm
Ticabo » Blog Archive » Infographic Linking Techniques Pingback

[...] on the other hand makes it easier to remember that information. How else could you explain the secrets of the mega shark? Host Offline And the fact is you do not even have to Host on your server, you can help [...]

November
24
3:10 am
Bob Esponja wrote:

Great very nice infographic, Looks pretty good work!

Juegos de Peluqueria

January
3
9:06 am
Z F wrote:

yeah this information will help for my physics project

January
21
2:56 am
Christian wrote:

I think you spent more time on this chart then we did making the movie.

February
3
12:30 pm
Alexander wrote:

Funniest and most ironic design I saw in years!! Thank you for that. Shows me sideways that we don´t get shown just ANY movie made in Hollywood over here in Germany – the really ludicrous ones seemingly keep out, ´cause i never heard of “mega shark vs. giant octopus” before.

February
9
11:20 am
Max wrote:

Any chance we’ll see a poster in similar style for the sequel „Mega Shark VS. Crocosaurus“? Now that would be the icing on the cake!

February
26
2:17 am
Travel wrote:

this is rad! do you have any information on MECCA SHARK though?

March
2
2:05 pm
Tractor Parts wrote:

Very nice infographic, I wish I had a mega shark.

May
7
12:29 am
susan wrote:

striking ironic designs, i like this style.

May
27
6:36 pm
sam wrote:

where I can find something like this ?

June
4
4:14 am
gzpen wrote:

Any chance we’ll see a poster in similar style for the sequel „Mega Shark VS. Crocosaurus“? Now that would be the icing on the cake!

July
13
2:47 pm
Daniel wrote:

okay im usually down wit da retarded shit of the internet. but this is just to much. cant believe its an actual movie

August
1
7:39 pm
coach poppy wrote:

You know, I always thought there were some plot holes in Mega Shark Versus Giant Octopus. Though, clearly, the physics behind a giant shark

October
10
1:13 am
mumay wrote:

Amazing how many people posted comments in here. Now we have these remote controlled flying shark toys. Next we will get octopus air swimmers. Great for Halloween partying with RC flying sharks chasing diners around the house.

May
12
12:09 pm
Katie wrote:

This website is my inhalation , real good layout and perfect subject matter.

Why not leave a comment?