Nothing in our solar system

I always enjoy PBS Digital’sGame/Showas a source for smart commentary on the culture surrounding games. The whole videogame thing must be good for views, because the first episode of newest showSpace Time!is all about Mario’s jump height in Super Mario World. The series is meant to focus on astrophysics in general, but what better way to get people watching at square one than to tap into one of the biggest cultural icons of the past few decades? It worked to get it on the front page of Destructoid, at least.

In the episode, astrophysicist Gabe Perez-Giz discusses the calculations involved in going from measurements of Mario’s jump pattern to finding the acceleration due to gravity (denoted as lowercase g) on the planet. It turns out that inSuper Mario World, g is about eight times that on Earth, and Mario can only jump to the enormous heights that he does as a result of his incredible alien leg strength.

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But then, ifSuper Mario Worldtakes place on a fictional exoplanet, why does he (kind of) speak English? Checkmate, Atheists.

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