Page 25 Fall 1990
The
Academic Juggler Freefalling,
Or, Jugglers' Many Commonalities by
Arthur Lewbel
I
continue to get mail from jugglers interested in communicating via
electronic mail. The most promising response was from Emory
Kimbrough. Emory is a system operator of Compuserve's Science /
Math Forum, and has offered to set up a message board, library, and
conference space on this forum if enough people are interested.
Other
computing jugglers who wrote to me
too late to get in last issue's column, along with their electronic
mail addresses, are: Peter Lawson, Eric PromisIow, David Ward, and
Mike Hojnowski.
It
would not surprise me if our juggling
day survey found that approximately one percent of Americans know how
to juggle. I base this guess on the fact that about one percent of all
employed workers in the U.S. are computer programmers, and most
programmers seem to know how to juggle! More seriously, since the
juggling survey consisted of people who are interested enough in
juggling to fill out the form, it will likely overestimate the true
percentage of people who can juggle (statisticians call this type of
problem "sample selection bias").
Why
are so many jugglers also computer programmers? Juggling and computer
programming have some similarities. They tend to be practiced alone or
in small groups, they involve inventiveness within strictly defined
limits (the hardware and the law of gravity), and they both consist of
challenges to be mastered. Juggling is an offbeat, nonconformist thing
to do, and programmers tend to be attracted to hobbies of that sort.
Why
are so many jugglers also vegetarians? It's partly due to this same
willingness to be different. Tolerance of nonconformity, of
differences in views and beliefs, is almost required to take up
something as unusual as juggling. These characteristics, and the
generally peaceful nature of juggling itself, are generally consistent
with liberal philosophy, which may explain the general tendency of
jugglers to be politically left wing. As juggling becomes more common
and less unusual, we should expect to see jugglers with more diverse
and mainstream attitudes. Does this relate to the rise in popularity
of combat juggling?
Answer
to the parachute question: If there were no air resistance, the
jugglers would throw the clubs straight across, exactly as if they
were weightless in space. The situation would be the same as that
experienced by Jake Garn when he juggled in the space shuttle. When
the shuttle orbits the earth it is actually faIling around it (without
air resistance) and is weightless.
After
opening parachutes the answer changes. With a parachute open the
juggler's terminal velocity is greatly reduced, to approximately 17
feet per second for an average parachute. The larger the
parachute, the lower the terminal velocity, and hence the more likely
that the jugglers will have to throw the clubs straight ahead or even
upwards.
If
any of you actually try this stunt you will need to find objects with
terminal velocities similar to your own. In freefall you will probably
need solid balls or weighted clubs. Passing with open parachutes might
be physically easier, except for the problem of parachutes tangling.
Given how much jugglers like a challenge, I'm sure we'll soon see a
photo of parachuting jugglers in this magazine. Maybe I'll try This occasional feature of JW is devoted to formal analyses of juggling. Please send suggestions, comments, or potential contributions for this feature to Arthur Lewbel, Lexington, MA). |