The person running would get more wetter then the person walking as you will be catching more rain than walking because you are running into more rain than if you were walking through it, but it does depend on the distance you are running or walking
walk because you will be in the rain or whatever water source for longer.
no
because when running your heart rate stays constist then someone who is walking
A towel gets wetter as it dries the person using it.
A homophone for gate is "gait," which refers to a person's manner of walking or moving.
Running is a faster locomotion than walking.
Yes walking is better for you than running
AnswerIt depends on the distance, speed and how heavy the rain is. There is a saturation point so if you walk two miles in torrential rain you will be saturated same as if you run it. The person running could arrive a second before it stops raining and the person walking would have dried off a bit by the time they arrive, in this case you would arrive drier by walking. If neither person is travelling long enough to saturate the person travelling slower will be more wet. If the runner gets there before reaching saturation - and it continues raining - then the walker will be wetter on arrival. The answer is: it depends![added]in general, you don't come in contact with near as much rain when running vs walking.Using a few generic values:rain terminal velocity: 6.5 m/s, walking: .9 m/s, jogging: 1.8 m/s, person dimensions: 1.8x.61x.15mand a generic formula for area of rain which you could come in contact with: A=(sqrt(walk^2 + rain^2)*width)*(depth + height) [ m^3 / s ]this gives rate of exposure walking = 7.8 m^3/s, and running = 8.0 m^3/showever, even though you are exposed to slightly more when running, this can also be offset if the person is running at close to a 75 degree tiltalso, (the defining factor) the slower walker is in the rain for twice the amount of time & therefore almost double the amount of rain
idk... motivate them, set a good example by running urself perhaps?
GoPro
That you either come to a stop, or go on running, or walking, perpetually.
Walking, running and digging.