Science
Related: About this forumFlies and Mosquitoes Beware, Here Comes the Slingshot Spider
17-Aug-2020 9:05 PM EDT, by Georgia Institute of Technology
Newswise Running into an unseen spiderweb in the woods can be scary enough, but what if you had to worry about a spiderweb and the spider being catapulted at you? Thats what happens to insects in the Amazon rain forests of Peru, where a tiny slingshot spider launches a web and itself to catch unsuspecting flies and mosquitos.
Researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have produced what may be the first kinematic study of how this amazing arachnid stores enough energy to produce acceleration of 1,300 meters/second2 100 times the acceleration of a cheetah. That acceleration produces velocities of 4 meters per second and subjects the spider to forces of approximately 130 Gs, more than 10 times what fighter pilots can withstand without blacking out.
The Peruvian spider and its cousins stand out among arachnids for their ability to make external tools in this case, their webs and use them as springs to create ultrafast motion. Their ability to hold a ready-to-launch spring for hours while waiting for an approaching mosquito suggests yet another amazing tool: a latch mechanism to release the spring.
Unlike frogs, crickets, or grasshoppers, the slingshot spider is not relying on its muscles to jump really quickly, said Saad Bhamla, an assistant professor in Georgia Techs School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering who studies ultrafast organisms. When it weaves a new web every night, the spider creates a complex, three-dimensional spring. If you compare this natural silk spring to carbon nanotubes or other human-made materials in terms of power density or energy density, it is orders of magnitude more powerful.
More:
https://www.newswise.com/articles/flies-and-mosquitoes-beware-here-comes-the-slingshot-spider
safeinOhio
(32,756 posts)eppur_se_muova
(36,317 posts)I'll be a little saddened if that turns out to be in error, but ... ummm ... I'm a tad skeptical.
CatLady78
(1,041 posts)Lots to bookmark....