Roozbeh Daneshvar

21%
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A simple but interesting example occurs in an ordinary spider’s web. The web is subject to impact loads arising from flies blundering into it, and the energy of these blows must be absorbed by the resilience of the threads. It turns out that the long radial threads, which form the main load-carrying part of the structure, are three times as stiff as the shorter circumferential threads which have the duty of actually catching the flies.
Structures: Or Why Things Don't Fall Down
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