The Physics of Jump Rope
sciencehabit writes "Last year, Jeffrey Aristoff and Howard Stone, mechanical engineers at Princeton University, were at the gym waiting for a pickup game of basketball. To warm up, Stone started jumping rope. As the rope whizzed over the head of his colleague, Aristoff wondered, 'Is it known how jump ropes bend in the wind?' A few literature searches later, he concluded that the answer was, 'not really.' Now, the two have solved the problem themselves."
I like this guy, he gets intrigued by some rather simple common things, then does the research to actually understand it, publishes it and closes the case. Here is another curiosity that he has researched. Perhaps not amazingly useful at face value, but it may well help someone else with an idea or understanding of something else.
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Off-topic, but jump rope really is great exercise for both cardio, all-around conditioning, and coordination. A ton of boxers, past and present, do it, and it's my almost exclusive cardio. 12 minutes with a speed rope is more intense than 30 minutes jogging. Just have a decent surface to absorb shocks, and not hard like concrete. I used a wood pallet outside with a board on it as a cheap solution.
"Jumping Rope" or "Skipping Rope" is the activity. "Jump Rope" is a rope dedicated to the purpose.
Learning about brewing beer, by brewing beer.
This is a better jump rope model: http://vimeo.com/25808035
I would think that they put it in quotes because they knew that it's technically inaccurate, but provides an easy to visualise mental model of the process
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