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nikolas smyrlakis

Severed Gecko Tails Have a Mind of Their Own | Wired Science | Wired.com - 0 views

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    Tails trying to save their life - Even after they're no longer connected to a lizard brain, gecko tails can flip, jump and lunge in response to their environment.
LeopoldS

PLoS Biology: Extreme Endurance Migration: What Is the Limit to Non-Stop Flight? - 1 views

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    the Alaskan bar-tailed godwit (Limosa lapponica baueri) (Figure 1), makes its eight-day, 11,000-km autumn migration from Alaska to New Zealand in one step, with no stopovers to rest or refuel. This roughly doubles the previous maximum direct flight distance in birds, challenging experts to square this remarkable marathon migration with our understanding of aerodynamic theory and endurance physiology.
ESA ACT

Cooperation of sperm in two dimensions: Synchronization, attraction, and aggregation th... - 0 views

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    Can we extract a new swarm behaviour out of the sperm: Sperm swimming at low Reynolds number have strong hydrodynamic interactions when their concentration is high in vivo or near substrates in vitro. The beating tails not only propel the sperm through a
pacome delva

Physics - Power laws in chess - 3 views

  • Finding power laws has now become de rigueur when analyzing popularity distributions. Long tails have been reported for the frequency of word usage in many languages [2], the number of citations of scientific papers [3], the number of visits (hits) to individual websites in a given time interval [4], and many more.
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    Is there such a law for the technology used in satellites ?
Alexander Wittig

On the extraordinary strength of Prince Rupert's drops - 1 views

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    Prince Rupert's drops (PRDs), also known as Batavian tears, have been in existence since the early 17th century. They are made of a silicate glass of a high thermal expansion coefficient and have the shape of a tadpole. Typically, the diameter of the head of a PRD is in the range of 5-15 mm and that of the tail is 0.5 to 3.0 mm. PRDs have exceptional strength properties: the head of a PRD can withstand impact with a small hammer, or compression between tungsten carbide platens to high loads of ∼15 000 N, but the tail can be broken with just finger pressure leading to catastrophic disintegration of the PRD. We show here that the high strength of a PRD comes from large surface compressive stresses in the range of 400-700 MPa, determined using techniques of integrated photoelasticity. The surface compressive stresses can suppress Hertzian cone cracking during impact with a small hammer or compression between platens. Finally, it is argued that when the compressive force on a PRD is very high, plasticity in the PRD occurs, which leads to its eventual destruction with increasing load.
Guido de Croon

Nano flapping wing MAV by Aerovironment (DARPA-funded) - 6 views

A 7.5 inch, 19 gram flapping wing MAV with camera! It uses active stabilization since it has single wings and no tail. http://www.avinc.com/nano http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-hummingbird-...

ai

started by Guido de Croon on 18 Feb 11 no follow-up yet
Juxi Leitner

Army heli-Weeble hops to avoid rubble trouble - tech - 18 September 2009 - New Scientist - 0 views

  • is a rotor-powered, bottom-heavy, self-righting vehicle that spends most of its time on the ground, thus conserving battery power. Instead of flying around, it hops, using a pair of contra-rotating rotors (to avoid the need for a tail rotor) mounted on an aluminium base. All this is encased in a spherical cage made of strong carbon-fibre spars (see diagram).
ESA ACT

Gecko's tail... a new way of reaching stability. Possible space uses - 0 views

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