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A Square Wheel, or The Ultimate Flat Tire.
See a video of this bike in action! http://youtube.com/watch?v=jchrQqH6bT0 Frequently Asked QuestionsCan I ride this bike? Yes. The device is on the lower-level of the Olin-Rice Science Center and anyone can ride it. What is a catenary? A catenary is the shape one gets when one lets a chain or a string droop between two endpoint. Its equation is y = 1/2 (e^x - e^(-x)). This is also known as cosh x. Catenaries, when inverted, form the strongest arch — the St. Louis Arch has such a shape — and often appear in bridge construction. Why do catenaries work for the square wheel? In a normal bike the forward motion is proportional to the pedaling speed. Is that true here? Who first realized that a square could roll in catenaries? G. B. Robison in 1960. What is it good for? Near some ancient pyramids in Egypt various pieces of wood cut into quarter-circles have been found. One theory is that they were used so that large blocks of marble with square cross-sections could be easily rolled. Indeed, a quarter-circle is close enough to a catenary that this would work. In more modern terms, if you had a multi-ton cube over a catenary road, then you could roll it in much the same way that you can roll a multi-ton car over a flat road. How far does it go in a year? An odometer on the vehicle showed that it travelled just over 15 miles between Sept. 2004 and Sept. 2005. For more information contact wagon@macalester.edu |