Owl Inverted
Owl Inverted
You know…it just might be able to even better than Tom Cruise… 🤔
Negative Gs can cause redouts from blood pooling in the head. Our blood vessels tend to constrict and are fitted pretty snuggly to our bone structure. Owls on the other hand have their head blood vessels running through air pockets in their vertebrae. These channels leave about 10x the required space for the blood vessels, and their blood vessels do have the ability to expand.
This is the amazing anatomy that allows owls to turn their heads that famous 270 degrees. Since they can’t swivel their actual eyes, the whole head needs to turn every which way. If their air and blood flow were subject to the opposing forces like it is for humans, they’d choke themselves out trying to look around. Longer explaination here.
And just searching quickly, most sources put regular flight for most birds reaches 2-4 Gs, with some maneuvers reaching 10-14, and some fancy birds like peregrine falcons hitting 25G. Owls typically don’t fly too fast because it would be counterproductive to flying silently, plus their flight feathers aren’t as dense, so I think the structure would give out before they could generate enough thrust.