electrostatic spider flight
https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2018/07/the-electric-flight-of-spiders/564437/
https://www.theguardian.com/news/2020/dec/05/ballooning-spiders-take-flight-earth-electric-fields
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00359-021-01474-6
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"just"
Maybe they've known about them but haven't been able to capture them until now
They've observed this in a lab.
Maybe the image is 4 years old too.
Crane flies are a big deal where I live, and especially the ones with reeeeally long legs - longer than anything pictured in the Wikipedia article - just love to come into people's homes, especially in September.
EDIT: Why is this relevant? When I was a little tyke, I'd constantly mistake them for airborne spiders. Sometimes, they form frigging swarms anywhere where there's water.
Adrian Tchaikovsky warned us of this.
Actually those spiders were pretty damn cool! And it's an excellent book series.
Oh, for sure. I hate spiders, and I was loathe to read it, but damned if I didn't enjoy all of them.
For a Sci-Fi newbie who's thinking of trying out Tchaikovsky, any advice on where to start?
Start off with the Children of Time series, there's no reason not to. Well written, great story with memorable characters, and a fantastic hard sci-fi twist on what intelligent life really is, and how we think of ourselves and others.
Third part is very disorienting however — it took me almost till the end to understand what was going on.
Thanks! I'll go for that as soon as I'm finished with the Three Body Problem series.
Hasn’t this been known for some time? Perhaps I’m confusing these spiders with ones that simply form wind sails.
Didn't the baby spiders fly away at the end of Charlottes Web?
Yeah, it was chaos on the set just off-camera.
The most recent article in the post is about 4 years old. I definitely recall learning this a while ago.
If you read any of the article OP provided, you'll see that the common belief that they were simply using the wind was false and they actually use electric currents in the air.
Well. Fuck.
This is how our lizard overlords felt when humans first achieved flight
Found the crab person
good news: it's basically only baby spiders that do it (on account of them being fucking tiny), hence why you haven't seen tarantulas floating about
Is this study (afaik published in 2018, but the paper is different to the 2021 one?) distinct from the others? I'm guessing they detailed the "electric" part better?
Edit:
Ohhh, it was about electric fields specifically. The 2018 paper only had airflow, they ar added/experimented with electric fields in the next study (it wasn't new, just nobody tested it):
More from wiki/Ballooning_(spider):
It seems more researchers were electrifying spiders (links to older studies):
Wiki also has a pic from Cho's paper (2018):
TIL:
... also I'm 100% sure the spiders let out a tiny 'wiiiiii' when they get airborne ...
But how common are windless conditions, really? It seems incredibly rare that there would be so little air movement that the effect of it wouldn't far overwhelm the electrostatic effect. I'm no meteorologist, though.
I didn't know that spiders could get any cooler
How do the electric fields holds up the scientists?
Uhhh, magnets, I assume. I've gone through the physics courses, scrapped through intro to electrical engineering, and I still don't get magnets. So we'll just go with those.
One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas.
They were bitten by an
radioactiveelectromagnetic spider!This spider is clearly on a mission, it has an objective and won't let anything get in the way of it.
Pictured is a banana spider, shitloads of them around here. Those are not flying. Looks like this one is making the zig-zag thing some orb weavers make.
Cool fact! They're also called Golden Orb Weavers because their webs shine gold when the sun hits right.
Bananaspider is quite ambiguous and refers to multiple spiders.
Golden Orb Weaver is the common name for Nephila (which this one is not), though often wrongly applied to Argiope.
This one is Argiope cf. aurantia, which has a bunch of common names including "golden garden spider", but I prefer "black and yellow garden spider".
That is Nephila, not Argiope. Argiope are the ones with the zig-zag pattern, though.
I recently heard a lecture that claimed that "halos” or "auras" some people see are humans' magnetic fields. I'd like to see some research on it.
You would probably find kirlian photography an interesting read.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirlian_photography
i'd be curious how they imagine that works, how do you see electric fields like that?
because, and excuse me for making a truly unorthodox claim here, it seems like the people who believe in auras might be making shit up?
flying nope
Next they figure out that Dandelion chutes actually use charge differences to fly or something.
Im imagining Eureka Seven but with spiders riding surfboards instead of mech its spider.
Arachnophobia Seven