Âé¶¹ÒùÔº


How a bubbly barrier could be life-saving for plunging boobies

boobies
Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Exciting new research is investigating how boobies (birds of the genus Sula) may be able to reduce the potentially lethal impact of their high-speed vertical dives by creating a cushion of "supercavitation" bubbles upon impact with the water.

"It is believed that the bodies of boobies, which can dive at speeds close to 100 km/h to catch their prey, possess certain adaptations to protect themselves from the intense impacts," says Dr. Yoshinobu Inada, a professor in the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics at Tokai University, Japan. "The desire to uncover and understand these adaptations inspired us to begin this study."

This research is being presented at the in Antwerp, Belgium on the 10th July 2025.

Cavitation occurs when an object moves through water at high speed and the pressure around it drops below the water's vapor pressure, causing bubbles to form. When a large number of these bubbles appear at high enough speed and cover the whole object, it's called "supercavitation." This phenomenon is known to reduce drag, among other effects.

"What we're interested in, though, isn't drag reduction—it's impact mitigation," says Dr. Inada. "We think that when boobies dive into the water, supercavitation might be occurring, and the bubbles could work like a cushion to soften the impact."

Dr. Inada and his team suggest that the boobies could be diving at high speed on purpose to trigger this protective effect.

"Without this cushioning, hitting the water at 100 km/h would cause a massive impact—likely strong enough to break bones or even be fatal," says Dr. Inada.

To test this hypothesis, Dr. Inada and his team accurately recreated the head of a booby by using an existing CT scan of their skull and building a 3D model.

"We then printed the model using a 3D printer to make a physical replica, and installed an accelerometer inside it to measure impact forces during collisions," says Dr. Inada.

To launch the model at speeds approaching 100 km/h, they also needed to build a customized launcher, and then filmed the model descending rapidly into the water with a high-speed camera.

Booby head model enters the water and creates cavitation bubbles. Credit: Dr. Yoshinobu Inada

A promising preliminary finding of this project is that although the impact force of hitting the water generally went up with dive speed, Dr. Inada and his team observed repeated occasions where impact force dropped after reaching very high speeds, which were associated with the formation of a large number of bubbles.

Analysis of the video footage led Dr. Inada and his team to wonder if these bubbles were helping to cushion the crushing forces of impact through cavitation.

"We suspect this drop in impact might be due to supercavitation, so we're currently preparing more experiments to see if the effect holds up under different high-speed conditions," says Dr. Inada.

Cavitation is more often used in the by marine predators as a means of disabling or killing prey, as seen in the rapid-attack claws of pistol shrimps or the thresher shark's debilitating "tail slaps."

Supercavitation is already used in aquatic engineering to achieve higher speeds of submersibles through drag reduction, but there could also be applications in mitigating impact forces.

"If we can confirm that supercavitation actually helps to reduce this impact, it could be really useful for human-made objects entering water at high speeds," says Dr. Inada. "For example, it might even be applied to the design of spacecraft that splash down in the sea when returning to Earth."

While these cavitation bubbles have been observed in repeated experiments, these findings are still preliminary and Dr. Inada would like to continue conducting these experiments at even higher diving speeds of 100 km/h, which is the speed that Northern gannets have been known to dive at.

Citation: How a bubbly barrier could be life-saving for plunging boobies (2025, July 10) retrieved 23 August 2025 from /news/2025-07-barrier-life-plunging-boobies.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

The risks of low-speed impacts with liquids

0 shares

Feedback to editors