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Biomimicry - Japanese Trains Mimic Kingfisher

Biomimicry - Japanese Trains Mimic Kingfisher

Engineers solve a problem with help from birds.

BirdNote Daily

February 24, 20241m 45s

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Show Notes

In the 1990s, train engineers in Japan built trains able to travel nearly 170 miles per hour. The problem was that when the trains exited a tunnel, the air in front of their bullet-shaped noses expanded rapidly, creating a loud “tunnel boom.” The chief engineer, a birder, looked to the shape of a kingfisher’s bill to design long, narrow train noses that parted the air. The trains became both quieter and more efficient.

More info and transcript at BirdNote.org

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Topics

birdingsciencekingfisherbirds