To kick off Plant Week here on FYFD, we’re taking a closer look at that ubiquitous flower: the dandelion. Love ‘em or hate ‘em, these little guys manage to get just about everywhere, thanks in part to their amazing ability to stay windborne for up to 150 km! To do that, the dandelion uses a bristly umbrella of tiny filaments, known as a pappus, that can generate more than four times the drag per area of a solid disk. Its porosity – all that empty space between the filaments – is also key to its stability; it helps create and stabilize a separated vortex ring that the seed uses to stay aloft. Check out the full video below! (Image and video credit: N. Sharp)
Tag: plant week
Plant Week: Introduction
Spring has sprung! The trees have leaves, the flowers are in bloom, and snow is (almost) a distant memory.* And here at FYFD, we’re getting ready to kick off a full week of celebrating the intersection of fluid dynamics and plants.
To get you into the mood, here’s a look at some previous plant-filled posts:
– How trees use negative pressure to hydrate
– The catapulting seeds of the hairyflower wild petunia
– Seeds that self-dig
– How desert moss drinks from the air
– The swimming of zoosporesStay tuned all next week for lots more plant physics!
*Confession: it’s still snowing at my house as I type this. But the trees do have leaves and there are flowers blooming. Poor things. – Nicole
(Original image: Pixabay)