crysta1c1ear
Automotive
- Aug 14, 2003
- 409
thread1-180705
The old thread has been closed, so I've opened a new one to continue the discussion.
I watched the formula 1 grand prix on TV at the weekend, and at the start of the grid they had flags for "formula 1" and for "the FIA". These flags were fluttering.
The ripples moved in the direction 'flag pole bottom' to 'flag tail top'.
Each ripple had a direction approximately parallel to a line from 'flag pole top' to 'flag tail bottom'.
In the previous discussions I'd implied the ripples moved downwind and mentally I'd pictured them as vertical. But clearly vertical ripples travelling downwind provide no means of supporting the flag. Also a straight horizontal flag also has no means of supporting itself.
Watching the flag, it occurred to me that the ripples are the means by which the flag supports itself- well, more accurately, the means by which the wind supports the flag.
I believe the tail of the flag tries to drop and as it does so, it pendulums down and round towards the pole, crumpling as it does so.
If you look at a flag pole so that the pole is on the left and the flag is on the right, these crumple zones run in this direction \. The wind hitting them provides lift and causes them to run up the flag as well as downwind.
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/| These three lines represent an arrow; the direction the ripples moved.
Code:
||_____
||\ \ \|
|| \ \ |
||-----|
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I watched the formula 1 grand prix on TV at the weekend, and at the start of the grid they had flags for "formula 1" and for "the FIA". These flags were fluttering.
The ripples moved in the direction 'flag pole bottom' to 'flag tail top'.
Each ripple had a direction approximately parallel to a line from 'flag pole top' to 'flag tail bottom'.
In the previous discussions I'd implied the ripples moved downwind and mentally I'd pictured them as vertical. But clearly vertical ripples travelling downwind provide no means of supporting the flag. Also a straight horizontal flag also has no means of supporting itself.
Watching the flag, it occurred to me that the ripples are the means by which the flag supports itself- well, more accurately, the means by which the wind supports the flag.
I believe the tail of the flag tries to drop and as it does so, it pendulums down and round towards the pole, crumpling as it does so.
If you look at a flag pole so that the pole is on the left and the flag is on the right, these crumple zones run in this direction \. The wind hitting them provides lift and causes them to run up the flag as well as downwind.
_
/| These three lines represent an arrow; the direction the ripples moved.