New Scientist - USA (2021-02-20)

(Antfer) #1
20 February 2021 | New Scientist | 55

Tom Gauld


for New Scientist


Answers


into a glass, you may notice
that smaller bubbles rise in
straight lines, whereas larger
bubbles tend to follow a
zigzagging or spiralling path.
Leonardo da Vinci was among
the first to document this puzzling
phenomenon. Now known as
Leonardo’s paradox, it remained
unsolved for centuries until it was
tackled by the tools of modern
fluid mechanics in the past few
decades, and it is still an area of
active research.
The small bubbles are spherical
and generate small amounts of
spinning in the liquid that
surrounds them. This “vorticity”
can be shed behind them in a
symmetrical wake structure.
The large bubbles, however,
become spheroidal and generate
a greater amount of vorticity that
cannot efficiently be shed in a
symmetrical wake.
Instead, their wake forms a
more complex, non-symmetrical
structure, leading to a variety
of complex trajectories for the
bubbles, including zigzag,
spiral and even chaotic ones.


This leads to the path instability
of larger bubbles as they rise.

Groan up


Why do older people groan or say
“ohoo” when we sit down, stand
up or do pretty much any one-shot
physical action? Is it a cultural
convention or is there a physiological
reason? (continued)

Kate Wykes
Stoke on Trent, Staffordshire, UK
After coming down with a
pain and fatigue disorder in
my late 20s, I noticed that I was
making “ohoo”, “ooy” and “oof ”
sounds as I attempted physical
activities.
When exerting yourself
physically, it helps to brace and
stabilise the body. There is also an

emotional release: the sound is a
“huff ” that shrugs off some of the
mental distress from the pain,
enabling you to continue.
I also noticed that one of my
housemates at the time, who
started experiencing backache,
began making similar sounds to
myself, which I had never heard
them make before. So there are
possibly cultural and social causes
for this noise-making.
We are often told to hide our
pain and put up with it. When in a
situation or at an age where this is
more acceptable, perhaps we take
the opportunity to express how
we feel inside and stop with the
constant “I’m fine” charade.
Whatever your age, living
with pain or fatigue from day
to day, together with the mental
effects this can cause, is enough
to make you go “ohoo”.

Barrie Quilliam
Mobberley, Cheshire, UK
I am 85 years old and don’t
groan when I stand up, but
tend to fart. Is this caused
by something similar?  ❚

Quick quiz #89
Answers^
1 A shrewdness
2 13 years
3 Bog body
4 Eric Gutkind
5 B12^

Quick crossword
#76 Answers

ACROSS 1 Macrocephalous,
10 Rigid, 11 Down house,
12 Aileron, 13 Red heat,
14 Equal, 16 Melanotic,
19 Actinides, 20 Acute,
22 Aircrew, 25 Reticle,
27 Magnetite, 28 Prime,
29 Chlorpromazine

DOWN 2 Angel dust, 3 Radar,
4 Code-named, 5 Power,
6 Anhedonia, 7 Ovule, 8 Sceptic,
9 Triage, 15 Lunar year,
17  Laser beam, 18 T-junction,
19 Anaemic, 21 Eleven,
23  Rigel,  24 Whirr, 26 Topaz

#100 Late for
the gate^
Solution

You get to the gate faster by tying
your laces on the travelator or by
running on the carpet. Imagine
twins T1 and T2 walking side
by side on a carpet leading to the
travelator. T1 stops to tie their
laces just before the travelator,
while T2 stops just on the
travelator, a fraction of a second
later. T1 will not catch T2.
The situation with running is
harder to picture, but think about
the lead that T1 gains when
running on the carpet, which is
extended when they walk on the
travelator. T2 can never make up
all of the extra lead that T1 built.
Generally, if your new action (for
instance, tying laces) is slower
than your walking speed, do it on
the travelator; if it is faster than
walking, use the carpet.

“ Leonardo da Vinci
was one of the first
to notice the puzzling
phenomenon of the
zigzagging path of
large, rising bubbles”
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