Faster than the Space Shuttle

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neufer
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Faster than the Space Shuttle

Post by neufer » Fri Jul 10, 2009 3:04 pm

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ttp://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/44531/title/Hummingbird_pulls_Top_Gun_stunts wrote:
For its size, courting flier dives faster than a returning space shuttle
By Susan Milius, July 4th, 2009; Science News, Vol.176 #1 (p. 7)
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385 body lengths per second : Male hummingbird courting speed
207 body lengths per second : space shuttle during atmospheric re-entry
200 body lengths per second : peregrine falcon dive
150 body lengths per second : fighter jet with its afterburners on
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<<They may wear too much pink to fit in among macho fliers. But when male Anna’s hummingbirds swoop out of the sky, they pull more g’s than any known vertebrate stunt flier outside a cockpit, says Chris Clark of the University of California, Berkeley.

During breeding season, the male hummingbirds soar some 30 meters and then dive, whizzing by a female so fast that their tail feathers chirp in the wind (SN: 8/25/07, p. 125). As the birds pull out of their plunge to avoid crashing, they experience forces more than nine times the force of gravity, Clark reports online June 9 in a biomechanical analysis in Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

Anna’s (Calypte anna) have become one of the most common hummingbirds in backyards and parks along the West Coast. The males of the species are marked by dramatic pink plumage on their heads. The stunt flier’s great swoop forms one of the centerpieces of his courtship display to win female attention. The bird orients his display dive in relation to the sun so that his female audience will get the brightest view.

“They look like a little magenta fireball dropping out of the sky,” Clark says.

Clark “has found amazing things about this display,” says Doug Altshuler of University of California, Riverside, who also studies hummingbirds. The new paper shows “to what extraordinary lengths these birds are willing to go to impress potential mates” and could open new opportunities for studying sexual selection.

Clark took advantage of the males’ predictable dive orientation, setting out a caged female, or even a stuffed female on a stick, to inspire birds to dive right in front of his video cameras. Males flew up and plunged over the female typically 10 or 15 times in a row, but one enthusiastic stunt flier completed 75 consecutive dives with a break of only a few minutes.

Analyzing the recordings revealed that birds at first flapped their wings as they dove. For a short period at their peak speed, the birds folded their wings and drilled down through the air at speeds up to 27.3 meters per second (61 miles per hour).

Adjust for body length, and the world just got a new fastest bird, Clark says. The hummingbirds’ speed reached 385 body lengths per second, easily beating the peregrine falcon’s recorded dives at 200 body lengths per second. (Though the falcon was diving at 70 meters per second.) A fighter jet with its afterburners on reaches 150 body lengths per second, and a space shuttle screaming down through the atmosphere hits 207 body lengths per second.

That period of tucked wings allowed Clark to calculate how well the birds’ form coped with drag. “Birds may be a little bit more streamlined than expected,” Clark says.

Then diving males stretch out their wings to pull out of their dive before crashing. “It’s like a gymnast doing an iron cross,” Clark says. If birds didn't have great strength for this maneuver, "their wings would just break off," Clark says.

When the birds experience the maximum g-forces in their dives, Clark notes, the birds enter the range where human pilots, more vulnerable due to larger bodies and circulatory systems, have to be careful about the risk of temporary blackouts.

Such prowess impressed Clark, but when he saw wild female birds watching the show … well. “Sometimes they looked bored or flew away,” he says. Males typically just kept on diving.>>
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Re: Faster than the Space Shuttle

Post by aristarchusinexile » Sat Jul 11, 2009 3:21 pm

neufer wrote:-----------------------------------------------
ttp://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/44531/title/Hummingbird_pulls_Top_Gun_stunts wrote:
For its size, courting flier dives faster than a returning space shuttle
By Susan Milius, July 4th, 2009; Science News, Vol.176 #1 (p. 7)
-----------------------------------------------
385 body lengths per second : Male hummingbird courting speed
207 body lengths per second : space shuttle during atmospheric re-entry
200 body lengths per second : peregrine falcon dive
150 body lengths per second : fighter jet with its afterburners on
-----------------------------------------------
<<They may wear too much pink to fit in among macho fliers. But when male Anna’s hummingbirds swoop out of the sky, they pull more g’s than any known vertebrate stunt flier outside a cockpit, says Chris Clark of the University of California, Berkeley.

During breeding season, the male hummingbirds soar some 30 meters and then dive, whizzing by a female so fast that their tail feathers chirp in the wind (SN: 8/25/07, p. 125). As the birds pull out of their plunge to avoid crashing, they experience forces more than nine times the force of gravity, Clark reports online June 9 in a biomechanical analysis in Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

Anna’s (Calypte anna) have become one of the most common hummingbirds in backyards and parks along the West Coast. The males of the species are marked by dramatic pink plumage on their heads. The stunt flier’s great swoop forms one of the centerpieces of his courtship display to win female attention. The bird orients his display dive in relation to the sun so that his female audience will get the brightest view.

“They look like a little magenta fireball dropping out of the sky,” Clark says.

Clark “has found amazing things about this display,” says Doug Altshuler of University of California, Riverside, who also studies hummingbirds. The new paper shows “to what extraordinary lengths these birds are willing to go to impress potential mates” and could open new opportunities for studying sexual selection.

Clark took advantage of the males’ predictable dive orientation, setting out a caged female, or even a stuffed female on a stick, to inspire birds to dive right in front of his video cameras. Males flew up and plunged over the female typically 10 or 15 times in a row, but one enthusiastic stunt flier completed 75 consecutive dives with a break of only a few minutes.

Analyzing the recordings revealed that birds at first flapped their wings as they dove. For a short period at their peak speed, the birds folded their wings and drilled down through the air at speeds up to 27.3 meters per second (61 miles per hour).

Adjust for body length, and the world just got a new fastest bird, Clark says. The hummingbirds’ speed reached 385 body lengths per second, easily beating the peregrine falcon’s recorded dives at 200 body lengths per second. (Though the falcon was diving at 70 meters per second.) A fighter jet with its afterburners on reaches 150 body lengths per second, and a space shuttle screaming down through the atmosphere hits 207 body lengths per second.

That period of tucked wings allowed Clark to calculate how well the birds’ form coped with drag. “Birds may be a little bit more streamlined than expected,” Clark says.

Then diving males stretch out their wings to pull out of their dive before crashing. “It’s like a gymnast doing an iron cross,” Clark says. If birds didn't have great strength for this maneuver, "their wings would just break off," Clark says.

When the birds experience the maximum g-forces in their dives, Clark notes, the birds enter the range where human pilots, more vulnerable due to larger bodies and circulatory systems, have to be careful about the risk of temporary blackouts.

Such prowess impressed Clark, but when he saw wild female birds watching the show … well. “Sometimes they looked bored or flew away,” he says. Males typically just kept on diving.>>
----------------------------------------------------
Thanks, Neuf. I wonder what speeds the big whales on Enceladus crack the ice at?
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neufer
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Re: Faster than the Space Shuttle

Post by neufer » Sat Jul 11, 2009 4:39 pm

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2009/jun/10/hummingbird-fastest-animal-fighter-jet wrote:
This article was amended on Wednesday 10 June.
The original headline was in violation of the Guardian's editorial code.
This has been corrected:


Hummingbirds outpace fighter pilots
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Re: Faster than the Space Shuttle

Post by aristarchusinexile » Sat Jul 11, 2009 11:39 pm

neufer wrote:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2009/jun/10/hummingbird-fastest-animal-fighter-jet wrote:
This article was amended on Wednesday 10 June.
The original headline was in violation of the Guardian's editorial code.
This has been corrected:


Hummingbirds outpace fighter pilots
Hand to hand combat makes fighter pilots look like pansies also, and bomber crews are nowhere people. And political and military leaders who order troops or missiles into combat are absolute cowards and opportunists.
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neufer
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Re: Faster than the Space Shuttle

Post by neufer » Sat Sep 10, 2011 9:52 pm

Click to play embedded YouTube video.
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Re: Faster than the Space Shuttle

Post by owlice » Sat Sep 10, 2011 10:07 pm

neufer, thanks very much for that! It's fabulous!!
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Re: Faster than the Space Shuttle

Post by Beyond » Sat Sep 10, 2011 10:43 pm

Yeah, neufer, thanks for giving us the 'little' birds.
Just goes to show that there's more to everything than we usually know.
Dragonflys outpace fighter pilots also.
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Re: Faster than the Space Shuttle

Post by Ann » Sun Sep 11, 2011 6:02 am

Fantastic! Wish we had these delightful little birds in Sweden! (Insert envious smilie.)

Fortunately we do have dragonflies. Thanks for pointing out their amazing flying qualities, Beyond! This is an image of a dragonfly that we've got in Sweden, called "blå flickslända" - it translates, perhaps, as "blue girl dragonfly"!






Image



By the way, what's wrong with pansies? :?:
No, I'm not exactly asking for a language lesson.

















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Re: Faster than the Space Shuttle

Post by Beyond » Sun Sep 11, 2011 5:31 pm

Ann, it looks like your dragonflys have foldable wings. The ones where i am are all 'fixed' in place, out to the side. Also, I've never seen that blue a blue around here. Light blue seems to be the only blue, and that's only on the BIG dragonflys. A lot of the smaller dragonflys are a dark shade of red.
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neufer
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Re: Faster than the Space Shuttle

Post by neufer » Sun Sep 11, 2011 5:57 pm


Beyond wrote:
Ann wrote:
Fortunately we do have dragonflies. Thanks for pointing out their amazing flying qualities, Beyond! This is an image of a dragonfly that we've got in Sweden, called "blå flickslända" - it translates, perhaps, as "blue girl dragonfly"!
Ann, it looks like your dragonflys have foldable wings. The ones where i am are all 'fixed' in place, out to the side. Also, I've never seen that blue a blue around here. Light blue seems to be the only blue, and that's only on the BIG dragonflys. A lot of the smaller dragonflys are a dark shade of red.
That's because Ann's "blue girl dragonfly" is a damselfly :!:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ischnura_heterosticta wrote: Ischnura heterosticta, one of at least two species with the common name Common Bluetail, is a common Australian damselfly of the family Coenagrionidae. They are generally found near slow-running or still water. The species is also salt tolerant.

Damselflies (suborder Zygoptera), typically being smaller than dragonflies, are sometimes confused with newly moulted dragonflies. However, once a dragonfly moults, it is already fully grown. There are other distinctions that set them apart: most damselflies hold their wings at rest together above the torso or held slightly open above (such as in the family Lestidae), whereas most dragonflies at rest hold their wings perpendicular to their body, horizontally or occasionally slightly down and forward. Also, the back wing of the dragonfly broadens near the base, caudal to the connecting point at the body, while the back wing of the damselfly is similar to the front wing. The eyes on a damselfly are apart; in most dragonflies the eyes touch. Notable exceptions are the Petaluridae (Petaltails) and the Gomphidae (Clubtails).

The largest living odonate by wingspan is actually a damselfly from South America, Megaloprepus caerulatus (Drury, 1782) while the second largest are females of the dragonfly Tetracanthagyna plagiata (Wilson, 2009). The female T. plagiata is probably the heaviest living odonate.>>
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