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#1
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What turned this bird around?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZGKZ5E3nCD8 3 seconds "realtime" slowed via high speed video Was it the tail feathers that the bird used to make a 180 in mid flight? Three segments in the video, each segment progressively focusing in on the 180 turn. |
#2
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It looks to me like differential wing strokes caused the turn
On Jul 16, 1:20*pm, " wrote: What turned this bird around? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZGKZ5E3nCD8 3 seconds "realtime" slowed via high speed video Was it the tail feathers that the bird used to make a 180 in mid flight? Three segments in the video, each segment progressively focusing in on the 180 turn. |
#3
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On Jul 16, 1:20*pm, " wrote:
What turned this bird around? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZGKZ5E3nCD8 3 seconds "realtime" slowed via high speed video Was it the tail feathers that the bird used to make a 180 in mid flight? Three segments in the video, each segment progressively focusing in on the 180 turn. Not that I'm the Audubon expert around here by a long shot :-)) but I had occasion to study quite closely the film shot by Art Scholl of seagulls for the film Johnathon Livingston Seagull. Art shot a ton of high speed film as his helper was hand feeding gulls off the transom of a boat to get shots to be used in the film. The film was a beautiful study of bird aerodynamics. Watching the gulls hover and turn almost in place I believe 2a is right. The birds use their entire bodies to face into these turns sort of like an ice skater twisting into a jump, then use differential strength with their wings with a stronger stroke on the outside wing to make the turn. The tail seems to help with general balance and causing a lean back toward the desired turn direction that helps the outside wing. They are indeed beautiful to watch, and I have to admit that without high speed film like that shot by Art, I never would have had an inkling of the exact dynamics involved it's so complicated. Dudley Henriques |
#4
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On Thu, 16 Jul 2009 18:17:34 -0700 (PDT), Dudley Henriques wrote:
Not that I'm the Audubon expert around here by a long shot :-)) I am, ask away, DooRight, hey! |
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