The Physics of a Rolling Rubber Band
sciencehabit writes "Modern physics can get complicated. Sure, researchers know exactly what forces act on a ball rolling down an incline — an experiment that helped Galileo develop universal laws for movement and acceleration. But what happens when a deformable shape like a rubber band rolls around? A new study reveals that the faster it goes, the more squashed it gets (video included)."
If you would have asked me how it would react as it rolled faster and faster, I would have just assumed it would have gotten "rounder" and possibly larger (elastic) due to centrifugal force.
Always amazes me how things don't always work as expected. Nature, physics, etc, are truly interesting... no, fascinating. Now if only I had a better grasp of higher level maths and wasn't a Network Engineer (data plumber).
i agree. I always liked physics made the world look different (like "car breaks are kinetic to thermal energy converters"). never could really get into dynamics though. i remember my teacher describing the the problem of rotational inertia of a deformable object (like a jelly disk) faster you spin the more it changes shape which changes its inertia.
props to the people out there with the knack and persistence to solve crap like that.
Physics is pretty cool.
I liked this quote from the article:
A car that changes its shape as it drives? Getting shorter, even? "Ouch, slow down, you hit my head!"
Automobile safety experts would have a field day with that.
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I'm sorry but this is such a common mis-spelling on Slashdot that it's getting to me. Cars have brakes. "Car breaks" means it stops working because of mechanical or electrical failure. Spellcheckers can't fix homophones.
From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
I like to imagine that all scientists operate on this principle. They sit around doing boring paperwork until one of them says "I wonder what happens when a deformable shape like a rubber band rolls around?", to which one of the others replies "Quickly, to the lab!" and they all run off to investigate it.
All science videos are improved by Yakety Sax.
Fucking rubber bands, how do they work?
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