Cord of your earphones makes nodes alone? There is a scientific explanation for this





A study from the University of San Diego in California shows that the earbud cords of players have a natural tendency to tangle spontaneously even when properly wrapped. It reassures you?

Do not tell me the story is the kind of stuff that we do not brag but we are all firmly convinced-because it is not possible otherwise, even if we do not believe in the occult sciences: it there is an invisible hand that when you put your ear Walkman smartphone or somewhere, even taking care to untangle and wrap the cord when you resume it became a bag of nodes.

Weird, right? Apparently not so much. Better, according to Business Insider , there would be a rational and scientific to this phenomenon as strange as boring explanation.

I'll do the short, because the report is a bit long, but you can read it here if it tells you : according to a report by Dorian Raymer and Douglas E. Smith, Department of Physics, University of California at San Diego (the people quite serious, so), it has been shown that cord less than 46 centimeters in length only if emmêlera almost never is wound on itself in a reel for this purpose. But beyond this length, things go seriously wrong: between 46 and 150 centimeters, the probability of formation of nodes increases sharply, reaching 50%, even if the cable is properly stored in the reel comes with . A demonstration based on ... 3415 different tests conducted by Raymer and Smith. You do not get bored at the University of San Diego.





The last part of the study is perhaps the most metaphysical, and probably will eventually convince you that some dark forces govern your daily unbeknownst to us voluntarily: the study shows that listeners do indeed have a capacity to to develop spontaneously, on their own, without human intervention, provided they undergo some movements.

One thing that moves on its own, it freaks non funk?
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