Mystery of why shoelaces come undone unravelled by science.
From The BBC
12 April 2017
You put on your shoes, tie them as firmly as possible, but
soon after the laces come undone. Now scientists think they know what causes
one of life's knotty problems. They found the force of a foot striking the
ground stretches and then relaxes the knot, while a second force caused by the
leg swinging acts on the ends of the laces, like an invisible hand. The
researchers say an understanding of shoelaces can be applied to other
structures, such as DNA. Using a slow-motion camera and a series of
experiments, mechanical engineers at University California Berkeley found
"shoelace knot failure" happens in a matter of seconds, triggered by
a complex interaction of forces. Lead researcher Christopher Daily-Diamond
said: "When you talk about knotted structures, if you can start to
understand the shoelace, then you can apply it to other things, like DNA or
microstructures, that fail under dynamic forces. This is the first step toward
understanding why certain knots are better than others, which no one has really
done."
The study began with co-author and graduate student
Christine Gregg lacing up a pair of running shoes and jogging on a treadmill
while a colleague filmed what happened next. They found that when running, your
foot strikes the ground at seven times the force of gravity. Responding to that
force, the knot stretches and then relaxes. As the knot loosens, the swinging
leg applies an inertial force on the free ends of the laces, leading to rapid
unravelling in as little as two strides. Ms Gregg said: "To untie my
knots, I pull on the free end of a bow tie and it comes undone. The shoelace
knot comes untied due to the same sort of motion. The forces that cause this are
not from a person pulling on the free end but from the inertial forces of the
leg swinging back and forth while the knot is loosened from the shoe repeatedly
striking the ground."
Scientists conducted tests with a variety of different
laces. But while some laces might be better than others for tying knots, they
all suffered from the same fundamental cause of knot failure, the study, which
was published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society A, found. Ms
Gregg added: "The interesting thing about this mechanism is that your
laces can be fine for a really long time and it's not until you get one little
bit of motion to cause loosening that starts this avalanche effect leading to
knot failure."
[Two things immediately spring to mind: First that it’s good
to know that scientific research continues to push back the boundaries of our
ignorance and second that it’s really nice to know that the fact my shoelaces
come loose on an infuriatingly regular basis isn’t just down to be being simply
incompetent in tying them. That’s good to know, damned good…..]
6 comments:
staring off into space, back of hand on forehead, with a sad grimace, "What evil lurks in the hearts of men..."
Quite a lot probably.... but mostly blood....... mostly.......
I have a running bet with my friends when we go hiking as to how far my knots will hold...
Some days I can last all day. Other times I'm re-tying them again and again..... It's probably the humidity. Yup, I'll go with that.....
This seemingly odd topic is interesting and relevant to me!
I am infamous for having untied shoelaces.
Though it seems to be universal problem fore me, it is maddening when I a running.
I have good running shoes, I tie double knots that look secure, yet I sometimes have to stop due to untied shoelaces. It happened to me just a few hours ago.
Maddening :)
Did the article help, Brian? You might be able to download the original article from the Proceedings of the Royal Society A website.
Indeed you can:
http://rspa.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/473/2200/20160770
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