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- Path: sparky!uunet!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!swrinde!mips!apple!constellation!convex!mccrorey
- From: mccrorey@convex.com (Martin McCrorey)
- Newsgroups: rec.models.rc
- Subject: Re: Thermals don't travel at prevailing wind speed
- Message-ID: <1992Jul28.141514.6460@news.eng.convex.com>
- Date: 28 Jul 92 14:15:14 GMT
- References: <1992Jul23.221308.24156@bcrka451.bnr.ca> <1992Jul28.042041.926@nntpd.lkg.dec.com>
- Sender: usenet@news.eng.convex.com (news access account)
- Organization: Engineering, CONVEX Computer Corp., Richardson, Tx., USA
- Lines: 28
- Nntp-Posting-Host: neptune.convex.com
- X-Disclaimer: This message was written by a user at CONVEX Computer
- Corp. The opinions expressed are those of the user and
- not necessarily those of CONVEX.
-
- >The same way bubbles get to the surface of a river. If they only
- >went down stream they would never come up. If they come up then
- >obviously they aren't going down stream as fast as the rest of the
- >river.
- >
- >Bye --+--
- >Kay R. Fisher |
-
-
- Well, the individual bubbles travel faster than the water. They rise
- vertically through the moving mass of water (discounting turbulence)
- and the individual bubbles have a velocity that is the vector sum of
- the water's (almost) horizontal velocity, and the bubble's vertical
- velocity. A stream of bubbles coming from a fixed source would have a
- stationary position in the stream of water, relative to the source of
- bubbles. I can't see why they would not go down stream as fast as the
- rest of the river.
-
- I haven't flown gliders, but it seems like thermals would behave
- similarly, with some qualifications. Thermals may not depend on a
- stationary source; rather, they start at a point on the hot ground
- where the surface currents converge, and that could move with the
- wind. The surface current pattern could serve to make the movement lag
- behind the wind, though. Also, if the thermal angles downwind like the
- stream of bubbles, then a glider moving upward would have to move
- downwind to follow it.
-
- Martin McCrorey
-