Watch the flight of a bumble bee

30 m/ph = 50 km/h

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Comments

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Picture of kazannova44 achievements

+12 1. kazannova commented 12 years ago

that is great .. but how thy know their way back ?
Picture of MajorIdea45 achievements

+15 2. MajorIdea commented 12 years ago

The laws of physics state that given the mass-to-wingspan ratio of a bumblebee, it is impossible for the creature to fly.

But it does.
Picture of Cream_Puff32 achievements

+10 3. Cream_Puff commented 12 years ago

1:12 - bee then proceeds to fly straight into his eye.
Picture of Urmensch44 achievements

+11 4. Urmensch commented 12 years ago

#2,
The old myth that "bumblebees shouldn’t be able to fly" was based on calculations using the aerodynamic theory of 1918-19, only 15 years after the Wright brothers made the first powered flight. So, while these early theories suggested that their wings were too small to create sufficient lift, since then scientists have made huge advances in understanding aerodynamics and how different kinds of airflow can generate lift.
Picture of loadrunner54 achievements

+5 5. loadrunner commented 12 years ago

Next stept is placing bombs underneath the bumbelbee. We are doomed
Picture of firest4rter41 achievements

+10 6. firest4rter commented 12 years ago

nature, as always, you are amazing
Picture of pesto30 achievements

+5 7. pesto commented 12 years ago

bee-ware I'm comming
Picture of ValdeLevis27 achievements

+27 8. ValdeLevis commented 12 years ago

#2 I guess bumblebees don't study physics.
Picture of WorldChampion26 achievements

+5 9. WorldChampion commented 12 years ago

Never knew that was there the expression came from.
Picture of Malinar33 achievements

+2 10. Malinar commented 12 years ago

How do they trucking people ???
Picture of konzoon26 achievements

+5 12. konzoon commented 12 years ago

glue some wifi and cell towers on there backs
Picture of c0mmanderKeen36 achievements

+8 13. c0mmanderKeen commented 12 years ago

They also generate tons of heat internally. The cooling mechanism is very interesting - especially since many proteins denaturate very quickly at high temperatures. Those bumblebees' filament proteins for example can take up to 80°C - because thats what the internal temperature around the wing muscles can become !!
Picture of LOSTPORK21 achievements

+3 14. LOSTPORK commented 12 years ago

SLOW MOTION FACE DERP (1:12)
Picture of torbengb43 achievements

+2 15. torbengb commented 10 years ago

Impressively straight lines! (Summarized at 03:20)
Humans can't walk that straight even if they have something to aim with.