Saturday, May 19, 2012

Helicopter light painting continues to snuff out physics lesson on your brain

Helicopter light painting continues to snuff out physics lesson on your brain:

Cool picture, huh? Wait until you see the video footage of this LED-adorned RC helicopter flying on a dark night. But this isn’t an art project. Analyzing the long-exposure photography turns out to be a great way of clearing up some of the physics of flight which otherwise are not at all intuitive. The helicopter used here has different colored lights on the nose and tail, as well as lights on the rotors.
Depending on how the aircraft is moving, different 3D spirography is captured by the camera. When you zoom in on part of the flight path it becomes clear that there are wider arcs on one side of the fuselage than there are on the other. This has to do with the forward progress of the aircraft and the rotation of the blades. The phenomenon is well known by helicopter enthusiasts, and accounted for in the design. But what we didn’t realize is that it actually translates to a theoretical speed limit for the aircraft. Our childhood love of Airwolf – the TV helicopter that could outrun jets — has been deflated.
You should remember the helicopter physics videos featured here last month. This is the latest offering and we’re still wanting more!


[via Reddit]

Filed under: led hacks, toy hacks

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