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Does Every Species Get a Billion Heartbeats Per Lifetime?

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There’s an assumption that because of the relationship between metabolic rates, volume, and surface area, animals get an average of one billion heartbeats out of their bodies before they expire. Turns out there’s some truth to it.

One Billion Heartbeats

As animals get bigger, from tiny shrew to huge blue whale, pulse rates slow down and life spans stretch out longer, conspiring so that the number of heartbeats during an average stay on Earth tends to be roughly the same, around a billion.

Mysteriously, these and a large variety of other phenomena change with body size according to a precise mathematical principle called “quarter-power scaling”.

It might seem that because a cat is a hundred times more massive than a mouse, its metabolic rate, the intensity with which it burns energy, would be a hundred times greater. After all, the cat has a hundred times more cells to feed.

But if this were so, the animal would quickly be consumed by a fit of spontaneous feline combustion, or at least a very bad fever. The reason: the surface area a creature uses to dissipate the heat of the metabolic fires does not grow as fast as its body mass.

To see this, consider a mouse as an approximation of a small sphere. As the sphere grows larger, to cat size, the surface area increases along two dimensions but the volume increases along three dimensions. The size of the biological radiator cannot possibly keep up with the size of the metabolic engine.

Humans and chickens are both outliers in this respect…they both live more than twice as long as their heart rates would indicate. Small dogs live about half as long.

[This is a vintage post originally from Feb 2013.]

Tags: biology · science · timeless posts

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cjheinz
10 hours ago
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How interesting! Make the most of your 2 billion heartbeats.
Lexington, KY; Naples, FL
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Playing Music With Barcode Scanners

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A Japanese group called Electronicos Fantasticos! figured out that by connecting a supermarket barcode scanner to a powered speaker and rhythmically scanning barcode-like patterns with it, you can make music. This is so fun!

Tags: Electronicos Fantasticos · music · remix · video

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cjheinz
1 day ago
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Lexington, KY; Naples, FL
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US airlines have transported passengers for more than two light-years since the last plane crash

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Sometimes, the most important news is when something isn’t happening.

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cjheinz
1 day ago
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A reading list from the Bard of the Revolution is worth saving.
Lexington, KY; Naples, FL
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30% off this weekend

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If you’ve been waiting to get Think in 4D because it’s not a cheap book (full color, 246 pages, self published), I thought I’d offer a special discount to celebrate Small Business Saturday and a year in print. 🥳

Now through Monday night ET, use code SMOL30 on my Shopify store for 30% off the hardcover, ebook, or both.
https://4dthinking.studio/ux-book

It’s chock full of resources, the reviews are great, treat yourself or a would-be designer you know. Happy holidays! 🎁

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Thanks for reading Think in 4D! This post is public so feel free to share it.

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cjheinz
3 days ago
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Unbelievable reviews!
Lexington, KY; Naples, FL
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The Joymakers • Down Where the Bluebonnets Grow

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I watched Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom the other night. I thought it was going to be a movie about music—it was not. Rather, it’s a largely fictionalized but powerful allegory exploring the lived experiences of African Americans in the early twentieth century (much of which remains relevant in the twenty-first). It’s definitely worth watching, if […]
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cjheinz
4 days ago
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I thought this movie was a tremendous downer.
Thumbs down.
Lexington, KY; Naples, FL
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How 10 famous artists would plate Thanksgiving dinner. The Jackson Pollock &...

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How 10 famous artists would plate Thanksgiving dinner. The Jackson Pollock & Seurat ones are pretty good.

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cjheinz
6 days ago
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Nice!
Lexington, KY; Naples, FL
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