Navigation überspringen
The Perfect Wave
Article

The Perfect Wave

A scientist and a surfer team up to convert a landlocked lake into The Endless Summer dream

Science, 2017

automatisch generiertes Audio
automatisch generiertes Audio

Editorial Rating

9

Qualities

  • Scientific
  • Visionary
  • Inspiring

Recommendation

If you surf, you’ve probably dreamed of the perfect break: consistent, close to home, and empty except for a few good friends. But have you ever taken it a step further and imagined controlling the shape and size of the wave? That god-like privilege eluded mere mortals until pro surfer Kelly Slater teamed up with fluid mechanics specialist Adam Fincham to create a landlocked endless summer. getAbstract recommends Jon Cohen’s article to surfers who want to know how science has changed their sport forever, and to anyone whose desire to surf was thwarted by a lack of proximity to the ocean.

Summary

The ocean is an inconsistent playing field, making it difficult to schedule surfing competitions.

Fluctuating ocean conditions make it difficult for beginners to learn to surf, while also making it nearly impossible for experts to schedule surf contests with consistently good waves. Waves result from storms that create massive swells. Swells roll across the ocean, invisible at the surface until they reach a place where the water is shallow enough for the wave to hit bottom. This disturbance causes the crest of the wave to move faster than the wave’s trough. The wave then breaks on the surface. There...

About the Author

Jon Cohen is a staff writer for Science magazine. He’s also written for The New Yorker, Smithsonian, Wired and Surfer.


Comment on this summary