While walking faster means encountering more drops per second, it also reduces the time spent in the rain. As a result, the two effects balance each other out: more drops per unit of time ...
The faster you walk, the more angled and horizontal that rain trajectory becomes, increasing the number of drops pelting your vertical surfaces with each stride. While it may seem like a good case ...
Because apparently, in theory, if you're walking it's going to hit the top of your head and maybe the back. But if you run you’re going to get smashed in the face with the rain as well.
Smiling in the rain: Derek Brockway filming his BBC programme Weatherman Walking in Llandrindod Wells, Powys Apart from a few sunny days recently, it feels like it has not stopped raining for ...
The question of whether you should run or walk in the rain has been debated for years - and it turns out there's a scientific reason why one is better than the other ...
Photographs: BCCI With rain delaying the start of the first Test between India and New Zealand at the M Chinnaswamy stadium in Bengaluru on Wednesday, some of the Indian players headed to the ...