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A well-spun egg also jumps.


Physicists have demonstrated that spinning a hard-boiled egg horizontally makes it jump into the air.

Scientists already knew that a fast-spinning egg spontaneously stands on its end. Random jitters jitters 'Butterflies' Psychology An episode of nervousness or anxiety that often precedes a public event; jitters is a type of performance anxiety which may affect actors in a stage production–stage fright or soloist musicians; it may respond to anxiolytics  during that process could amplify into leaps, researchers had theorized.

In some high-speed video images, hand-twirled eggs seemed to jump. But, no one knew whether those jumps were real or resulted from inadvertent upward propulsion Propulsion

The process of causing a body to move by exerting a force against it. Propulsion is based on the reaction principle, stated qualitatively in Newton's third law, that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.
 from a spinner's hand, notes Yutaka Shimomura of Keio University Keio University (慶應義塾大学 Keiō gijuku daigaku  in Yokohama, Japan.

In new tests, he and his colleagues spun egg-shaped pieces of aluminum at initial rates of up to 2,500 revolutions per minute in a machine custom-built to impart strictly horizontal spins. By means of optical, acoustic, and electronic measurements, the team detected that the mock eggs leaped a fraction of a millimeter off the surface for up to a few hundredths of a second. Dining spins of actual hard-boiled eggs at 1,800 rpm, the researchers saw gaps momentarily appear beneath the eggs.

The team's findings, reported in an upcoming Proceedings of the Royal Society Proceedings of the Royal Society is a scientific journal published by the Royal Society of London.

Today, the Royal Society publishes two proceeding series:
  • Series A, which publishes research related to mathematical, physical and engineering sciences
: A, illuminate il·lu·mi·nate  
v. il·lu·mi·nat·ed, il·lu·mi·nat·ing, il·lu·mi·nates

v.tr.
1. To provide or brighten with light.

2. To decorate or hang with lights.

3.
 how tiny fluctuations in physical systems can lead to unexpected effects, Shimomura says.--P.W.
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Title Annotation:PHYSICS
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief article
Date:May 27, 2006
Words:190
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