PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Stone skipping techniques can improve reentry of space vehicles

Experimental investigation, combined with theory, reveals key factors affecting the way a stone skips on water and how spaceflight vehicles make water landings

Stone skipping techniques can improve reentry of space vehicles
2021-04-20
(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON, April 20, 2021 -- Skipping stones on a body of water is an age-old game, but developing a better understanding of the physics involved is crucial for more serious matters, such as water landings upon reentry of spaceflight vehicles or aircrafts.

In Physics of Fluids, by AIP Publishing, scientists from several universities in China reveal several key factors that influence the number of bounces a skipping stone or landing aircraft will undergo when hitting the water.

The study involved theoretical modeling and a simple experimental setup using a model stone to gather data in real time. The investigators used an aluminum disk as a stand-in for the stone and designed a launching mechanism that utilized a puff of air from a compressor to control the speed at which the disk traveled toward the water.

Previous studies had already determined that spinning the stone is key in getting it to skip or bounce, so the experimental setup allowed a motor to apply a controlled spin to the disk prior to launch. In addition, the disk had a nylon cap containing an inertial navigation module to measure data in flight and transmit it to a computer via a Bluetooth connection.

The investigators observed two types of motions after the disk collided with the water surface: bouncing and surfing. In the latter, the disk skims along the surface of the water without bouncing at all.

A key quantity in determining whether the disk can bounce is the vertical acceleration. When this acceleration exceeds four times the acceleration due to gravity, g, the disk bounces. When it is slightly smaller, 3.8 g, surfing was observed.

"We consider the surfing phenomenon to be a critical form of bouncing, with 3.8 g as the critical bounce boundary," said author Kun Zhao. The minimum value at which the stone has the potential to skip was found to be 3.05 g.

The scientists also found the direction at which the disk or stone is spun affects its trajectory and the attitude or pitch, which is the angle between the water surface and the direction of flight.

"Our results show that the main effect of spinning is to stabilize the attitude during the collision by the gyro effect," said Zhao.

Spinning also deflected the trajectory of the disk in flight. A clockwise rotation bent the trajectory toward the right, whereas a counterclockwise spin deflected it toward the left.

"Our results provide a new perspective to advance future studies in aerospace and marine engineering," said Zhao.

INFORMATION:

The article "Trajectory and altitude study of a skipping stone" is authored by Jie Tang, Kun Zhao, Huatao Chen, and Dengqing Cao. The article will appear in Physics of Fluids on April 20, 2021 (DOI: 10.1063/5.0040158). After that date, it can be accessed at https://aip.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/5.0040158.

ABOUT THE JOURNAL

Physics of Fluids is devoted to the publication of original theoretical, computational, and experimental contributions to the dynamics of gases, liquids, and complex fluids. See https://aip.scitation.org/journal/phf.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Stone skipping techniques can improve reentry of space vehicles

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Examining clinician burnout

2021-04-20
What The Study Did: Researchers investigated the association of burnout at an academic medical center with clinician type, sex, work culture and use of electronic health records. Authors: Eugenia McPeek-Hinz, M.D., M.S., of the Duke University Health System in Durham, North Carolina, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.5686) Editor's Note: The article includes conflicts of interest disclosures. Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, ...

Researchers raise alarm over stalled adoption of biotechnology to improve food security

2021-04-20
The worldwide adoption of biotechnologies to improve crop production has stalled, putting global food security at risk, according to an international team of researchers led by the University of Birmingham. The group, which includes economists, plant breeders and plant scientists, is calling on governments worldwide to put in place policies and regulations that will drive progress in this area. In an article published in the 25th anniversary edition of Trends in Plant Science, the group, which includes researchers from Australia, Canada and India, also argues that societal acceptance of technologies such as gene editing is a big barrier to adoption. They urge the scientific community to work harder to convince the public and governments of the value of adopting ...

Combining light, superconductors could boost AI capabilities

Combining light, superconductors could boost AI capabilities
2021-04-20
WASHINGTON, April 20, 2021 -- As artificial intelligence has attracted broad interest, researchers are focused on understanding how the brain accomplishes cognition so they can construct artificial systems with general intelligence comparable to humans' intelligence. Many have approached this challenge by using conventional silicon microelectronics in conjunction with light. However, the fabrication of silicon chips with electronic and photonic circuit elements is difficult for many physical and practical reasons related to the materials used for the components. In Applied Physics Letters, by AIP Publishing, researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology propose an approach to large-scale artificial intelligence that ...

Patients with traumatic brain injuries face challenges navigating healthcare system

Patients with traumatic brain injuries face challenges navigating healthcare system
2021-04-20
INDIANAPOLIS -- Patients who suffer from traumatic brain injuries (TBI) often need a great deal of healthcare services after the injury, but the extent of care utilization is unknown. A new study from research scientists affiliated with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), Regenstrief Institute and IUPUI is one of the first to analyze how much care TBI patients use and identify areas of unmet need. "There is not a lot of information about traumatic brain injury care utilization available," said primary study author Johanne Eliacin, PhD, a Regenstrief research scientist and core investigator at the VA Health Services Research and Development Center for Health Information at Richard L. Roudebush VA Medical ...

Study highlights role of physical, mental health in cognitive impairment

2021-04-20
A recent study suggests that preserving physical and mental health helps older adults experiencing cognitive impairment stave off declines in cognitive engagement. "We found that declines in physical and mental health were associated with more pronounced cognitive disengagement," says Shevaun Neupert, corresponding author of the study and a professor of psychology at North Carolina State University. "The impact of declines in physical health was particularly pronounced for study participants who had more advanced cognitive impairment to begin with." There's ...

Body mass index, age can affect your risk for neck pain

2021-04-20
With roughly 80% of jobs being sedentary, often requiring several hours of sitting stooped in front of a computer screen, neck pain is a growing occupational hazard. Smartphones and other devices have also caused people to bend their necks for prolonged periods. But is bad posture solely to blame? In a recent study, researchers at Texas A&M University have found that while poor neck and head postures are indeed the primary determinants of neck pain, body mass index, age and the time of the day also influence the neck's ability to perform sustained or repeated movements. "Neck pain is one of the leading and fastest-growing ...

Explanations in online symptom checkers could improve user trust

2021-04-20
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -- Have you recently turned to your mobile device or computer to find out if your cough, sniffle or fever could be caused by COVID-19? The online symptom checker you used may have advised you to stay home and call your medical provider if symptoms worsen, or perhaps told you that you may be eligible for COVID-19 testing. But why did it make the recommendation it did? And how should you know if you can trust it? Those are questions that researchers at the Penn State College of Information Sciences and Technology recently explored through a project in which they augmented online symptom checkers by offering explanations of how the system generated its probable diagnoses and suggestions ...

Gold digger: Neural networks at the nexus of data science and electron microscopy

Gold digger: Neural networks at the nexus of data science and electron microscopy
2021-04-20
From sample preparation to image acquisition, electron microscopy (EM) requires precise and time-consuming steps to produce the clarity and detail needed to visualize small cell structures with high resolution. Moreover, once EM images are created, extracting the biological information out of them through analysis can be an even more laborious and time intensive task. Especially because current EM analysis software often requires the skilled eye of a scientist to manually review hundreds of images. With a bit of ingenuity and the application of cutting-edge neural networks, an interdisciplinary team of scientists at the Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience (MPFI) have created a new ...

Noncalcified coronary plaque burden higher in people with HIV

Noncalcified coronary plaque burden higher in people with HIV
2021-04-20
OAK BROOK, Ill. - People living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and without known cardiovascular disease have two to three times the noncalcified coronary plaque burden of non-HIV healthy volunteers, according to a study from Canada published in Radiology. Researchers said the results underscore the importance of a heart-healthy lifestyle in people living with HIV. HIV/AIDS emerged as a major public health crisis in the 1980s. Disease-related mortality peaked in the mid-1990s and has been dropping since, thanks in large part to antiretroviral therapy, which does not cure the disease but helps control it. Today, people ...

Base editors flex sights on sickle-cell disease

2021-04-20
Researchers at Beam Therapeutics have developed a redesigned base editor that shows considerable promise in directly repairing the single-base mutation that causes sickle-cell disease (SCD). Many strategies are being pursued to harness genome editing approaches including CRISPR to treat patients with SCD and related hemoglobinopathies. The most advanced method in the clinic involves targeting an upstream regulatory pathway to switch on expression of the fetal hemoglobin gene but does not target the SCD mutation directly. Writing in the April issue of The CRISPR Journal, a team at Beam Therapeutics, led by Ian Slaymaker and Giuseppe Ciaramella, describe the successful ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

SERIDA develops a remote sensing model to improve the control of fossorial water vole populations in agricultural areas of Northwestern Spain

New guideline expands stroke treatment for adults, offers first pediatric stroke guidance

Gout medication can reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke, finds new study

Astronomers reveal new details about dark matter’s influence on Universe

Cumulative lifespan stress, inflammation, and racial disparities in mortality between black and white adults

Consumer food purchases after glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist initiation

Universal pre-kindergarten for child maltreatment prevention

Family connection in adolescence and social connection in adulthood

AI-powered model advances treatment planning for patients with spinal metastasis

Could gene therapy treat a deadly heart condition that targets young athletes?

SwRI scientist uses anime for STEM outreach

Grandparenting is good for the brain

FAU ‘shark-repellent’ method could reform fisheries by curbing bycatch

City of Hope opens clinical trial to protect heart health of prostate cancer patients receiving hormone therapy

High nursing school debt, proposed education loan caps threaten US health care access

Chungnam National University team pioneers defect-free high-quality graphene electrodes

Antibodies targeting immunoglobulin E Cε2 region as potential rapid anti-allergy therapy

Shrubs curb carbon emissions in China’s largest desert

Why U.S. middle-aged adults are falling behind peers abroad

Reducing sodium in everyday foods may yield heart-health benefits across populations

Einstein Foundation Award 2026: Apply now for a €350,000 prize advancing research integrity and quality

First-of-its-kind probe monitors fetal health in utero during surgery

Major open access publisher appoints new office head in Korea

How does lifetime alcohol consumption affect colorectal cancer risk?

To reach net-zero, reverse current policy and protect largest trees in Amazon, urge scientists

Double trouble: Tobacco use and Long COVID

Eating a plant-forward diet is good for your kidneys

Elucidating liquid-liquid phase separation under non-equilibrium conditions

Fecal microbiome and bile acid profiles differ in preterm infants with parenteral nutrition-associated cholestasis

The Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA) receives €5 million donation for AI research

[Press-News.org] Stone skipping techniques can improve reentry of space vehicles
Experimental investigation, combined with theory, reveals key factors affecting the way a stone skips on water and how spaceflight vehicles make water landings