Film, Media & TV6 mins ago
What is the most aerodynamic form?
I was always taught that a teardrop was, giving teh perfect boundary layer etc. If this is teh case, why have I recently been informed that a free falling water droplet remains spherical in shape? (Ref: intellectual quix QI with Stephen Fry).
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It was shown by Pruppacher and Beard and by Pruppacher and Pitter that drops of water with radii <500 μ approximate to a spherical shape; larger drops are deformed into oblate spheroids, which with increasing size develop a flattened base and subsequently a concave depression.
Although the teardrop is a more aerodynamic shape than a sphere it does not follow that falling spheres will turn into teardrops; a tennis ball certainly doesn't and neither does a drop of water. This is because the drop retains as close to its spherical shape as possible through surface tension.
Although the teardrop is a more aerodynamic shape than a sphere it does not follow that falling spheres will turn into teardrops; a tennis ball certainly doesn't and neither does a drop of water. This is because the drop retains as close to its spherical shape as possible through surface tension.
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