Going Flat
Riding around on a flat tire is no fun. It feels really bumpy. But a square wheel may be the ultimate flat tire. There's no way it can roll over a flat, smooth road without jolting the rider again and again.
If the road itself has evenly spaced bumps of just the right shape, however, flat-sided tires can be the secret to a smooth ride!
Believe it or not, the bumps on the aliens' road (see "The Bumpy Bike Path") are the perfect shape to produce a smooth ride on a square-wheeled bike. It can't be just any old square-wheeled bike, though. Each side of the square tires must be related mathematically to the bump's height.
The bumps on the aliens' road are the shape of upside-down, or inverted, catenaries. A catenary is the curve formed by a chain or rope hanging loosely between two supports.
A hanging chain, fastened at its two ends, forms a catenary shape.
TRY IT!
Create your own inverted catenary.
You will need:
- piece of string, rope, or chain about 10 inches (25 centimeters) long
- sheet of paper
What to do:
- Hold one end of the string in your left hand and the other end in your right hand, each hand at about the same height.
- Let the string hang loosely between your hands. It forms a catenary!
- Carefully lay it down on a sheet of paper without changing the string's shape.
- Turn the paper so the string forms an upside-down U.
Now you can picture the cross section of each bump of the alien roadway. A series of such bumps, lined up in a row, would be the perfect surface on which to ride a square-wheeled bike.
How a square wheel rolls over a roadbed consisting of a sequence of inverted catenaries. Wikipedia
See also "Riding on Square Wheels."
NEXT: Triking Around
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