StarTalk Radio - Earth, Wind, and Water with Dr. Skateboard, The Armless Archer, and Jud Ready

Episode Date: August 6, 2021

Shoot an arrow without arms? Neil deGrasse Tyson and co-hosts Gary O’Reilly & Chuck Nice explore Olympic events– swimming, archery, and skateboarding– with materials scientist Jud Ready, “Arml...ess Archer” Matt Stutzman, and Bill “Dr. Skateboard” Robertson. NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can watch or listen to this entire episode commercial-free. Thanks to our Patrons Nicholas Grigalashvili, Jilam Dickson, Aden Hahn, Kaz Barnes, Ashleigh Cooper, Ridge Kimani, Tom Cardarella, ​​Michael Webber, Justin Nelson, and Mike Reno for supporting us this week. Photo Credit: English: D. Myles Cullen, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide. StarTalk begins right now. This is StarTalk Sports Edition. I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, your personal astrophysicist. And today we're going to be discussing three kinds of Olympic activities. First, fast pools. Second, can you hit a target, an archery target, if you have no arms? We'll check that out at mid-segment. And we're going to end with the one and only Dr. Skateboard, a new feature of the Olympics this year. The 2020 Olympics, of course, being contested in 2021.
Starting point is 00:00:48 I got with me the one and only Gary O'Reilly. Gary. Hi, Neil. Good to be here, Gary. Dude, dude. Yeah. I was telling people I stumbled. You got a wiki page of you and the time you were a pro footballer over in the UK.
Starting point is 00:01:03 I was very proud of that. So congratulations on that. And you also were a sports commentator there before you joined Star Talk. I'd like to think you're still a sports commentator. I still am, thank you, yes. Sharing that expertise with us. I could not find a wiki page on Chuck Nice.
Starting point is 00:01:19 We've got to work on that. Chuck? That's because I don't have legs as nice as Gary. Is that what that is? Yeah, man. When you go to Gary's wiki page, he's in some short shorts. And I'm like, who wears short shorts? Gary wears short shorts.
Starting point is 00:01:36 And now my man has got some gams on him, baby. He's got some great legs. So, Chuck, you're a comedian and a longtime StarTalk co-host and an actor of late. We're delighted to see you in all these things. And I just wanted you to know that we knew you when, okay, as you ascend. Yeah. Well, I'm not going anywhere. You're not going anywhere?
Starting point is 00:02:00 All right. Yeah, you can't get rid of me that easy. Chuck got a couple TV shows that he's gone. I know. I'm like this. No, I'm not going anywhere. All right. Yeah, you can't get rid of me that easy. Chuck got a couple TV shows and he's gone. I know. I'm like this. No, I'm not. I'm right here. And I swear I saw you in a Tide commercial with your daughter.
Starting point is 00:02:14 So you're everywhere now. That's good. Very good. Keep that going. Keep it going. So we're going to talk about the Olympics, which dates back to, of course, ancient Greece, when I think life was simpler, but I bet back then they didn't think so.
Starting point is 00:02:28 No one ever said, gee, life is simple today. No one's ever said that ever. You have to look back on it and say it was simple then and they didn't even know it. Yeah, except we look back on their life and we go, God, we have it so good. So the modern Olympics, which is what it's called, dates back to 1896,
Starting point is 00:02:46 and they tried to sort of jumpstart the traditions of ancient Greece. Some sports were, all the ones then were included, I think, if not all of them, but some were added. And, of course, the ones most people cared about in the day were track and field. And today, many, many more events are part of this contest, this every four-year contest.
Starting point is 00:03:10 And for this first segment, we're going to talk about swimming pools. Swimming, that's one of the events as a category where records seem to be dropping all the time, every Olympics. And it's like, what is it? Did something change with the water? Is there something about the bathing suit? Is it the ball head that you shave? What's going on there?
Starting point is 00:03:36 And so what we need is someone who's thought about this. An engineer. This is StarTalk, so we're going to bring some, we're going to science the shit out of this, as Matt Damon said from the surface of Mars, or at least his character did. And we've got an old friend
Starting point is 00:03:50 of the show, Judd Reedy. Judd, welcome back to StarTalk. Hey, Neil. Hey, guys. Thank you for having me back. You're based at Georgia Tech, and Georgia, I think even your campus,
Starting point is 00:04:01 co-hosted the 1996 Olympics. Oh, the Olympics, 1996, indeed. With the city of Atlanta. I'd love it. And you're deputy director of innovation initiatives for the Georgia Tech Institute for Materials. This materials is one of the hidden things. It's not purposefully hidden, but just no one thinks about it. It doesn't make headlines.
Starting point is 00:04:22 But new stuff shows up on the shelf with new properties. And I think of you every time that happens. I just want you to know. I was thinking of you yesterday when we were, because, you know, we always have the dossier on everybody. And I was like, I wonder, as the chief, like, research engineer, do you ever come up with something and go, oh, no, this is too good.
Starting point is 00:04:43 I got to keep this. We do that a little bit with patents. We do keep it to ourselves just a little bit, but not forever. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Because, yeah, as your principal research engineer at the Georgia Tech Research Institute, GTRI, not quite an acronym, but we'll take it because good stuff happens there. So let me ask you something.
Starting point is 00:05:03 But we'll take it because good stuff happens there. So let me ask you something. Swimming pools, you know, if you see somebody with like eight gold medals around the neck, they probably got it for swimming. And in recent years, we think of Katie Ledecky and Michael Phelps, of course. And so our pool— Michael Phelps doesn't count. He has gills. Michael Phelps doesn't count. He has gills.
Starting point is 00:05:28 Michael Phelps is related to that, whatever that thing was in the shape of water. That fish guy. Oh, you're talking about the movie. The movie. That movie, yeah. If you ever look at Michael Phelps, he almost kind of looks like that little sea monster. And I think he's got big flappy feet, too. Like, they might as well just be webbed, you know. So let me ask, what's going on? Are we just
Starting point is 00:05:47 getting better or is something happening on the back end of that where the pools are getting faster? And if they're getting faster, how does it get faster? It's just water. I know the properties of water from chemistry and physics. What's going on? And I know you've been thinking about this. Yeah, it's all of it. It's the materials as well as just the technology for the pool. The main problem with the water is the resistance created by the other swimmers. If we just ran one swimmer at a time, a lot of this technology we introduced wouldn't be necessary. But when you put eight lanes of swimmers, big, huge, six-foot strapping men and women in there, they displace a lot of water and create waves. And those waves create friction, create resistance to the body. Wait, excuse me, not if you're in the lead.
Starting point is 00:06:31 Yes, but only if you do the single link. As soon as you make a turn, you're going to interact. Oh, you got everybody else's wake who's behind you. Sometimes that's a good thing, though, having that wake behind you. One of Phelps' medals was achieved by one of his teammates in the relay, riding the wake of the, who was then the world record holder from France, riding his wake, and then right at the last minute, surfing over top of the wake and several powerful strokes and winning it.
Starting point is 00:07:00 You can see it right on the footage. It's pretty impressive. Wow. Wait, wait. So you're saying some of the disturbing... He was drafting? Yeah, basically. He was in the fourth leg. Aquatic drafting. Yep, exactly right. Just like geese do the same thing when they're going through the air. He was doing the same thing. You can see him move over towards the
Starting point is 00:07:17 lane line. Yeah, but the geese didn't take your course at Georgia Tech. They just know it innately like a lot of Georgia Tech students do. They got the math. Wow. Giving that shout out. They don't get a medal. So if the wake, if the waves, if all of this turbulence in Nepal is your major problem, and we've built pools out of concrete forever and ever and ever, it seems,
Starting point is 00:07:44 how has it been overcome? Yeah, there's three different ways that we do it here at Georgia Tech, and we've got the fastest pool in the United States. The first is that we've got tremendous pumping power to recirculate the water. You want to recirculate an Olympic-sized pool at least every four hours to keep the algae growth and everything down. So that's 60 gallons at least per second. Wait, don't tell me the algae prevents you from swimming faster.
Starting point is 00:08:08 I don't believe that. It does because you want to pump and keep the water clear. And so by pumping that water so fast, you've got gutters to extract it, and then you have to return it to the pool. And so those – So are you saying that it creates jet stream in the water? Yeah, if you swim in any pool, there's current that circulates the water for filtration.
Starting point is 00:08:28 And if we did that in this pool with 60 gallons per second, we would create a very noticeable current that the inside and outside lanes would experience. And so instead, we send it through the bottom through these things called rosettes, which is like a mushroom that allows the water to come up and sweep everything to the side.
Starting point is 00:08:43 So that cuts down on those currents. The other is the gutter system, that the waves, as the wave reaches the wall, it falls off into the gutter rather than hitting the wall and bouncing back. And then the third thing is… Because waves just love to reflect off of surfaces. They do. Waves and surfaces go way back. And the depth of the pool is important as well for that wave.
Starting point is 00:09:05 The Olympic pool here as well as Tokyo, they're three meters deep. So that's like 10 feet, nine feet. And anything... A quick question. Is that the depth that the water polo folks work in? Yeah, all the Olympic pools are always... It's both as well as the rhythmic swimming. The diving pool is actually five meters deep because you don't want to hit the bottom for that, of course. So got a little extra depth. If you've got those side drains, Judd, then that means the pool has to be completely full. Overfull, in fact.
Starting point is 00:09:34 When these eight strapping young men and women jump into this pool, they displace that equal volume of water, just like if you dropped an ice cube in a glass of water. Who do you think you are, Archimedes here? I love that. Yep. just like if you dropped an ice cube in a glass of water. Oh, you think you are Archimedes here? Really? Oh, I love that. Yep. Yeah, me and Archimedes.
Starting point is 00:09:49 I'm taking that on. You've got to get rid of the water. So what stops it flooding? So you have to keep sucking that away every time that they're doing it. So you really have to have a complete system. It's a full circle, fully enclosed system that's overfilled slightly because you don't want air to get entrained into the suction system because that will create cavitation on your impellers or your pump and can cause those to break down prematurely as well. So what you're saying is your system dampens the waves as they hit the wall, okay?
Starting point is 00:10:19 But it can't do anything about the waves until they get there. But it can't do anything about the waves until they get there. So if you're in lane one and lane eight or whatever the edge lanes are, you're going to feel everybody else's wave before it gets deadened to your left. Sorry, Neil. No. They've got those paddle wheel lane dividers. And, in fact, here at ARPU, we actually use two side-by-side so that the paddle wheels absorb the wave from the lanes immediately adjacent to you.
Starting point is 00:10:44 Oh, so those serve a purpose. I thought it was just to show those guys where to go. If you look at them, they're not stationary. They spin as the weight takes them, and that absorbs that energy and prevents it from going over there. We found the reason why we set so many records at this very pool is that we used two lane lines along there to dampen it even further. All right, so why doesn't every pool have this?
Starting point is 00:11:07 Secret stuff. I guess we filed a patent on it or something. Now everybody knows. Then why don't they discount the gold medals, the world records at your pool? We didn't start doing that actually until a couple of years ago. In fact, after this wake surfing incident that occurred and people became kind of aware of this, that was in the early 2000s when Phelps was winning those. And so, like we didn't have, if you look at the footage from 1996 Olympics, not only is there a single lane line, but the starting blocks have changed as well. The starting blocks there are flat, whereas now they're inclined. Why?
Starting point is 00:11:46 Why didn't anyone figure out that you might want to incline the starting blocks long ago? That's crazy, right? Yeah, because you're pushing off of something. I mean, in track, like, nobody starts flat. Right, right. So why did this take so long to figure out? Well, the first starting block was 1936. The Berlin Olympics was literally just a wooden box that was bolted to the to the pool deck and that's what they stuck with for it got slightly
Starting point is 00:12:10 better when they started using metals um but up until the 96 olympics it was still just essentially a box but a metal flat surface that had an anti-slip surface on top of it and so you needed to dig with your toes to grab onto the edge. And so I went back and looked at the footage, and all the swimmers except for a couple are always two-footed on the front, curling their toes over, where there's only a few sprinter styles. And after that Olympics, first they inclined the surface to add it, and then they added an additional incline, so it was two inclines, so something to push off with.
Starting point is 00:12:43 And so, yeah, you're starting with that extra oomph, just like a sprint. When you say two inclines, you mean for the two different feet? Yeah. No, well, yeah. So one foot's on that, and one foot's pushing on the back pedal. Like a sprinter in a track. Exactly right. Okay, very cool.
Starting point is 00:13:00 All right, Judd, does your pole have 10 lanes or eight lanes? Yeah, all Olympic pools have 10 lanes, but lane zero and lane nine are not occupied. But that would reduce the impact on the swimmers on the outside lanes. Am I correct in thinking like that then? Yes, they do not have that swimmer. So you would want those, though there's downsides in that, depending if you're a right-handed breather or a left-handed breather,
Starting point is 00:13:24 sometimes you're not able to see your competition perhaps on the critical final leg so that would be the main main thing probably what is the best lane because and why do they always give the fastest to the best i'm superstitious always with horses and everything i pick lane four so i would pick lane four but you know i I think a lot of it depends on just your training and your strategy. And like, even though we're introducing these things in good swimsuits, there's a lot of biomechanics that go into it. So we can provide all these things, but when it comes right down to it, it's the human
Starting point is 00:13:59 in the loop that really makes a difference. Well, wait, but then you wouldn't have a job. So let's stick with the technology. We got to actually bring this to a close, but it's been a delight to have you back on. And sorry, there's only one segment because there's a lot we've been covering for our Olympic, the attention we've been giving to the Olympics.
Starting point is 00:14:18 But like I said, you're in one of my favorite fields, material science. And the more people know about what you do, I think the better offer we'll all be. So... We're going to keep on keeping you happy, Chuck and Neil. So, thanks again for being on StarTalk, and when we come
Starting point is 00:14:34 back, we're going to talk to an ace archer who happens to not have arms when StarTalk returns. We're back. StarTalk Sports Edition. We're talking about the Olympics, a series of these programs where we're just trying to figure out what's going on, how does it work,
Starting point is 00:15:18 and all the ways that science might be informing it. So, Gary, who do you have for this segment? We have the most wonderfully interesting athlete, Paralympian Matt Stutzman. Won silver in the London Olympics in 2012. Guinness World Record holder for the most accurate arrow shot at a target over distance by any individual.
Starting point is 00:15:47 310 yards. That's three football fields all in a line and then some. Now, team gold in the Parapan Olympic Games and an individual silver in the Paraparalympic Games. Okay, Matt, welcome to StarTalk, dude. Thanks for having me. So if I'm going on a hunting trip, I'm taking you. I'm down.
Starting point is 00:16:08 I'm down. Do you ever hunt? Do you go bear hunting with a bow? You know what? I haven't bear hunted yet because I feel like if I don't do good, he will chase me down and try to eat my arms off or something like that. I can't afford to lose any more appendages. Yeah, no more limbs for you. Let me ask, could you just explain how,
Starting point is 00:16:32 forgive my naivete here, but how do the Paralympics work? I presume each sport has its own rules about what needs to be your circumstances in order to participate. So in the case of the Paralympics archery, how, what are the rules about that? So the division that I'm in is basically, they're looking at the least amount of disability possible. So pretty much everybody in my group of, let's say a hundred, all of them have have most of their disabilities are from the waist down, whether they're paralyzed and have to be in a wheelchair or they lost a leg and they have to stand on a prosthetic. There's different categories, but that's the most competitive category. And that's where I want to be because I just want to be the best. Yeah, well, I mean, really, you're just showing off.
Starting point is 00:17:24 That's what he's doing. That's what he's doing there. Let's be honest. I mean, here's a guy who's just like, yeah, I have a prosthetic leg and, you know, I can hit a target
Starting point is 00:17:32 from 100 yards. And you're like, bro, I don't have arms. I don't have arms and I hit a target. And I can do it from three times the distance. So bite that.
Starting point is 00:17:43 How about that? He wins every argument there ever was. There's no argument to have, man. Hands down, you know. Okay, Matt, let's roll back a little bit here. This Guinness Book of Records, which you own outright, someone was saying to me that when you attempted this, because of the crosswinds,
Starting point is 00:18:03 you had to aim at an air conditioning unit on a building in a completely different place to hit the target. What is going on? So that the air would move it onto the target, and you have to know that in advance. Is that what happened there? Yeah, so the rules state you have
Starting point is 00:18:20 to use a 60-pound bow, and you only get three attempts, you know, ever, to make it. You have to call your ship. Wait, wait, wait. Just, wait, for the non-archers, when you say use a 60 pound bow and you only get three attempts ever to make it. You have to call your ship. Wait, for the non-archers, when you say 60 pounds, that's the force necessary to pull the string. To draw back the bow, yes.
Starting point is 00:18:36 Not that the bow weighs 60 pounds, just to be clear. That is the kinetic energy that pushes the arrow forward is 60 pounds. If it weighed 60 pounds you'd be Hercules. I would definitely need bigger arm muscles for that one. But so, yeah, so to figure out how to shoot that far away, when you do the math, you have to aim at a certain angle,
Starting point is 00:19:00 you know, like whether it's like 32 degrees or whatever that is, and you have to calculate the arrow speed. And so for me, it just so happened that where I needed to aim to calculate all this to actually hit the bullseye, I aimed at an air conditioning unit across the street at a high rise building. It happened to be right in the perfect place. So I was aiming at that. In all my calculations, that's where it ended up being. So you're not only an expert bowman, you're a sniper too.
Starting point is 00:19:34 I've gone with intuitive scientist. That's the hallmark of a great sniper is that you're able to adjust for crosswinds and distance, man. No, we need a poster. We need a poster with Matt, with the target hit. And the captain just says, do the math. See, Chuck, I just thought you'd ask the simple question, how many times did you hit the air conditioning unit?
Starting point is 00:20:04 That's a Chuck. Chuck, you should have used that one. That was you, Chuck. You dropped that one, Chuck. I did. So, Matt, how many times did you hit the air conditioning unit? He killed three people in that apartment building. So, real quick, they never actually found out it was me
Starting point is 00:20:21 because I don't leave fingerprints to prove it was me. Oh. Ooh. Yeah. I told you he was a sniper. Wait. So, Matt, let me ask another naive question. And forgive me if this sounds sort of ableist, right?
Starting point is 00:20:38 So, do you have an advantage over those who would have lost their arms later in life? You having been born with no arms, so you only ever have known life with no arms. Absolutely, there's an advantage. It's funny because when I first got into archery, they're like, there's no way you can shoot a bow. You have no arms. It's impossible. You have to use your arms to shoot a bow. Well, then i started shooting a
Starting point is 00:21:05 bow and then they're like wow that's like and you and you wait and you aimed at them here's how i can't shoot wow that would be a great argument there's no way you can shoot a bow oh oh damn damn i guess i was wrong the last words on his tombstone. I guess I was wrong. It's funny because when I first started shooting, there was a TV show that does spoof news. And they said,
Starting point is 00:21:39 Armless man wins silver, but shot several people along the way. Oh, okay. It was funny, but yeah, so when I started... But your brain has never known arms, so you're not fighting a pre-expectation of what you can do. Yeah. If they tested
Starting point is 00:21:53 my brain and they said that the average person's brain, the area of their brain that controls their feet motor skills is the size of a pea and mine's like the size of like a softball. Wow. Whoa.
Starting point is 00:22:08 I was able to train my brain to do all this extra stuff with my feet. You know, I probably just said, we don't need hands. Let's just throw that chunk of the brain out and we'll use that to store foot stuff, I guess. Wait, wait. So for those only hearing this, I can describe that it looks like you're sitting in some kind of a garage workshop and there's some badass looking vehicle over your left shoulder. What's going on in that? What is it? Is that a safe house? Is that a bunker? Where are you? Do you know something? It's where I keep my arms. That way the people in the house will think I can't do anything.
Starting point is 00:22:43 But yeah, there you go. So when I'm not shooting my bow, I love cars, and I love working on cars. I do almost all the work myself. And what's behind me right here is my race car that I just got done building and fixing up. So tell me about some of your science background. You sound sufficiently physics fluent, so that tells me you must have had some physics in your portfolio. To be honest, not a lot. A lot of it was just kind of like self-taught growing up. I lived on a farm.
Starting point is 00:23:12 That works too. Yeah. That works too. I lived on a farm, and I had to a lot of times think of how I was going to do it. Like, for example, I remember I was like eight years old, and my said I needed to carry this five gallon bucket of feed out to the trough. And I had to figure out how I was going to take a board and put it across from one feed bucket and then stand up underneath it and balance. And I had to figure out like I was out there with a measuring stick trying to find the middle of the stick. So when I lift it up on it, it wouldn't fall.
Starting point is 00:23:39 You know, so there was things like that throughout my whole life that I had to rely on like physics and math to just kind of overcome things really so Matt you're a father of three boys right so how do you how do you do the super dad hero at home while you prepare to go to Paralympics in Tokyo and race a car yeah you know what's amazing about my boys is just like they don't know any different. This is who they know. This is their dad. They go along with my craziness, whether I'm shooting my bow, working on cars. They just support me.
Starting point is 00:24:14 In fact, they are one of the biggest motivations in my life and why I push myself to where I'm at. Because without them pushing me, I mean, that's honestly how I fell into archery in the first place because I, nobody would hire me and I couldn't figure out how to get a job because people would say you have no arms. And so they wouldn't hire me. So I found archery to put food on the table for them. So if it wasn't for them, I probably wouldn't have done this. I would have been trying to figure out something else. So. Wow, man. That's, you know, I'm reminded of an episode.
Starting point is 00:24:45 Thanks for mentioning the family there, Gary, because that reminded me. I don't know if it was Twilight Zone or One Step Beyond, one of these sort of half-hour short story format TV series from the 1960s where there's this kid, middle school kid or younger, in school, and in their art class, they're modeling clay. And they had to make a clay model of their hero and so one person did superman and then thor and one person
Starting point is 00:25:12 just i'm doing my father okay and he's doing this clay thing and he and he only gave him one arm and the teacher says no put the other arm no this idea and then later on the teacher meets the father and the father has just got one arm and it was like oh my gosh that father went to go on and star in the fugitive no but the point is like you said that if if if that just is life and you don't know any different you're not in a position to judge it. It just is, and then you live life and celebrate life for being alive. So let me ask you this. When it comes to— I've got to throw this out there.
Starting point is 00:25:53 And I've tweeted this too because I've been thinking about this a long time, and I thought, I wonder if octopuses pity humans for how few limbs we have because they've got eight so i mean so when you shoot what what are the mechanics behind you shooting yeah yeah take us through what that is so how about um as i'm explaining it i can also show you oh my gosh yeah just very sweet okay okay and do it and and uh because many people will only hear this. If you can be a little more descriptive than you otherwise would be. Okay.
Starting point is 00:26:29 So this right here is a release aid that I had made. This is the only modification that I used to shoot my bow. So when you look at a bow or when you're listening or in your mind visualizing a bow, I'm shooting a normal bow that you would buy off the shelf that you would use to shoot with your hands. So like they didn't specifically make this bow for me whatsoever. Cool.
Starting point is 00:26:54 And that's legit? Within the rules? Everything's within the rules. So, and even this thing that's on my shoulder right here is within the rules. So, I put on a strap that goes on my shoulder right here is within the rules so i put on it it's a kind of a yoke around your shoulders that goes underneath my armpits and across my chest and then i tighten it up and over my right shoulder i have a release aid that looks like a trigger of maybe like a gun
Starting point is 00:27:19 or something like that and it has a long bar that bar goes on on my chin. So when I'm aiming, I pull with my shoulder. That applies pressure to that little trigger, which allows the bow to shoot. Aha. And so is this, but is it your chin or your teeth that engage that? It's my chin. So I put it in my mouth to hook it onto the bow. And you hook it onto the bow. And then as you pull back with your shoulder,
Starting point is 00:27:45 that causes the bow to come back. But then all you have to do is put your chin down on the release, and then the hook pulls up and bang. So this bow that I'm going to use right now is a bow that I'm actually going to use at the games. And it is
Starting point is 00:28:02 shooting a little itty-bitty skinny arrow. And I know you guys are into this stuff but this arrow weighs 429 grains it shoots out of my bow at 200
Starting point is 00:28:18 miles per hour so literally as I fire the bow when you guys see this by the time this arrow hits the target, which is only going to be about three or four feet away from me, it's already doing 200 miles per hour. So it would be at 200 miles an hour the instant it separates from the string. And so because that's the last moment where it's getting any energy that you supplied it. That is correct. And then the rest is just aerodynamics and gravity at that's the last moment where it's getting any energy that you supplied it that is correct and then the rest is just is aerodynamics and gravity at that point it does okay so now
Starting point is 00:28:50 you're seated slow down over a period of 310 yards but you have to calculate that into you know how much is it going to slow down i know when i did that shot it was about a six second aero flight took about six seconds okay seconds. Okay, so you had to shoot wherever that air conditioner was. It was surely high to the side of the target because of the crosswinds, but also had to have been above the target because you have to
Starting point is 00:29:15 allow the arrow to drop. Yeah, it was about 20, I think it was like a 28 or 30, might have been a 32 degree angle that I was aiming in the air. So 32 degrees up. That's like, like that.
Starting point is 00:29:29 Gotcha. Wow. Okay. So I rest the bow for people who can't see, uh, I rest the bow against my left leg and I'm sitting in a chair. I use my right foot to pick up the arrow and load it onto the bow like that. foot to pick up the arrow and load it onto the bow like that. I then use my right leg and grab the bow and I pick it up and I sit gentleman style where I cross my legs. So it kind of brings my
Starting point is 00:29:54 right foot up to my chest. At this point, I take my release aid and I bend down to the string and I hook it on. Wow. Like that. And now that it's hooked on, I pick the bow up with my right foot. And so now it's a very weird, awkward yoga position. Okay? So at this point, I'm going to take my right foot and push it away from my chest. Like that.
Starting point is 00:30:20 And now you're getting that 60 pounds of force. Yeah, so I don't know if you guys can see all that, but that's what it looks like. Okay? So then I aim at the target, bring the trigger up to my jaw, and then I add pressure until it shoots. Bam. Just like that. Look at that.
Starting point is 00:30:37 That results in bullseyes and medals and lots of smiles. Wow. You've got to do this. You've got a set number of arrows to release in a set period of time. That's intense. How are you controlling? How are you able to dial yourself down and focus in the middle of competition? So you shoot 72 arrows for qualification,
Starting point is 00:31:04 and you shoot six arrows at a time and you get four minutes to shoot each six arrow group and then you go score them pull them and stuff but when i do that i'm so in the zone that when i like when i draw my bow back i don't know who's around me you know i practice the timing i do a lot of mental prep, what a good shot feels like. So the distance that we'll shoot in Tokyo is 50 meters. And the bullseye... Oh, that's nothing for you. Damn.
Starting point is 00:31:34 They should just hand you the medal and then you keep... I'll take that. The bullseye is smaller than a CD. So a perfect score is 720 points and the world record is 705. And the last several months or so,
Starting point is 00:31:55 I've been shooting in practice about 708 to 712 range. Ooh, ooh, ooh. Wow. You're getting there. We're going to be watching your ass. Oh my gosh. This year has been amazing for me as far as mentally. I just got back from trials and beat
Starting point is 00:32:09 the old world record by 12 points. Or no, over 20 points is what the new world record. That's amazing. That's two world records. Just in comparison, if you guys want to know,
Starting point is 00:32:25 so I average like 700 points at 50 meters, okay? The number one ranked able-bodied archer in the world shoots for United States of America. And on the same day, on the same field, when they were shooting their scores, they shot a 704 maybe, and I shot 700. I'm only like three or four points off
Starting point is 00:32:50 the number one abled-bodied archer in the world. So as a comparison. Right. Yeah, well, there is no comparison. You make him look like dog food. No, stop. Let's be real here.
Starting point is 00:33:05 So Matt, when you rock up, do you all of a sudden get a lot of attention because of who you are? Yeah, yeah. And do the other athletes get a similar sort of attention and does that kind of blow them out? But for you, you seem to have grown, obviously, into this attention.
Starting point is 00:33:24 And is it, you know you know what i've been here before i'm not fazed by this or um do you see the other athletes getting kind of outside of their comfort zone with the attention oh for sure you know uh what one thing that's interesting is i've been my whole life used to attention and what i mean by that is is it can be negative attention too like people making fun of me because I have no arms or like I'm at a restaurant, especially as a kid, especially as a kid, you know, in a restaurant with my feet and everybody in the restaurant staring at me. Right. So my whole entire life, I've been able to say, you know what? I don't care what they think I'm going to do me. None of that
Starting point is 00:33:59 bugs me. Like, I don't care. I'm going to block them out. So when it comes to archery and I get into that on the, on the stage of it means something and we have thousands of people watching, I don't even know that they're there. Whereas, let's say for you, let's say I'm shooting, you know, against Gary or something. He's never been in that situation, right? So you shot really good and now you're shooting for a gold medal, but you've never shot in front of 10,000 people before. So there is an advantage there for me you know because i've been dealing with my whole life and they haven't been you'd make a great stand-up comic you gotta you gotta have
Starting point is 00:34:36 that you gotta have that same mentality it's like i don't care if these people not laughing no only chuck has to feel that way. Other comics, they're actually laughing at this. No. So I'm delighted by how much physics you picked up in your life. And as Gary said, a lot of it would have come intuitively to you if you didn't have the formal training. You were thinking about nature and forces and energy the right way.
Starting point is 00:35:03 And on this show, we're delighted to learn when athletes throw in some math to get their medal. And so, Matt, it's been a pleasure to have you on this program. We will all be watching you in Tokyo. Yeah. And good luck, but it doesn't even sound like you need it. I'll take all the good luck. I appreciate you guys inviting me onto the show.
Starting point is 00:35:22 It's been amazing. I loved all the laughs. Thank you again. Well, thank you. We've got to take a quick break. I want to thank Matt Stutzman for being on for this segment. And when we return, we're going to have Dr. Skateboard on yet another
Starting point is 00:35:35 one of our Olympic installments of StarTalk. We'll see you. How can you get your own Patreon shout out like Michael Weber, Justin Nelson, and Mike Reno? Well, go to patreon.com slash star talk radio and support us. And thank you to Michael, Justin, and Mike, because without you, we couldn't do this show. We're back.
Starting point is 00:36:28 StarTalk Sports Edition. We're talking about the Olympics. And in this segment, we're going to address skateboarding. Yeah, I said it. Skateboarding. It is a new Olympic sport. Yay! Gary.
Starting point is 00:36:44 Gary. Dude. Do we know anybody? Who did you get for this segment? Well, there's only one telephone number that we needed. And this guy can drop the science and he can drop the tricks. This has to be Bill Robertson, a.k.a. Dr. Skateboard!
Starting point is 00:37:02 Dr. Skateboard. Okay, anybody named Dr. Skateboard is fine by me. Okay. So let's give him his props. Okay, PhD in education. Selected as a Fulbright Scholar. Okay. Nominated by the UTEPE in 2008.
Starting point is 00:37:18 UTEP, dude. I know you're British. That's UTEP, University of Texas, El Paso. Okay, thank you for UTEP. For Professor of the Year. He is a TED, yes. Oh, University of Texas, El Paso. Okay, thank you for UTEP. For Professor of the Year, he is a TED... Ooh, Professor of the Year. He is a TED talker. I know, the dude's got some chops. And then you give him a board,
Starting point is 00:37:33 and he's two times US Masters champion, 2013 and 14. He's three times Masters freestyle champion, and he is in the Freestyle Hall of... So freestyle means you do creative stuff that no one ever dreamt of doing, freestyle champion, and he is in the freestyle hall of... So freestyle means you do creative stuff that no one ever dreamt of doing, and then you get remembered for it. Drop it like it's hot.
Starting point is 00:37:53 And provided you don't die from it. There's a selection effect there. Yes. So Bill, Dr. Skateboard, I resonate deeply with you because I know you're a science educator. But in what ways have you folded skateboarding into that enterprise? I'd be delighted to learn how you figured that out. And my notes here, it says you call it action science.
Starting point is 00:38:18 So what's going on there? Yeah, well, so originally it started, I was a middle school teacher in New Mexico trying to get people interested in physical science concepts. And the kids at middle school was very difficult and challenging. They didn't like the traditional experiments. But one day I decided. It's called hormones. Just to be clear. Middle school.
Starting point is 00:38:39 It's not that I choose. I don't think I like these traditional experiments. That is not what's going through their head. Not at all. For sure. But bringing my through their head. No, not at all. For sure. But bringing my board out made a difference. And I could present things about forces, motion, Newton's laws of motion, and things we had to cover. And they really enjoyed it.
Starting point is 00:38:57 So that sort of started my journey with that. I've been a longtime skateboarder and performer. So I just worked on the ideas of integrating physical science concepts related to forces, motion, Newton's laws of motion, and simple machines into that approach. And then it took off from there, not only using skateboarding, but other action sports, BMX, and other ways to try to connect kids to things they're interested in, and then also to the science. So to put, if you will, put the action science was putting physical science in the context of things young people like to do.
Starting point is 00:39:32 I love it. An educator who can't stop telling people, as Carl Sagan used to say, when you're in love, you want to tell the world. And so you're in love with skateboarding, and you just fold that into whatever the lesson plan is going to be. Very good. Thank you. You're not just shredding, brah.
Starting point is 00:39:49 You're learning something. Okay. So, Doctor, when we get to the Olympics, and like we said, it's a debut for skateboarding, you've got two categories, street and park. What? What? I'm out.
Starting point is 00:40:03 Street skateboarding. Street skateboarding and park. What? What? I'm out. Street skateboarding. Street skateboarding and park. Now, I mean, what can we expect from those two categories? So in both the disciplines of park and street skateboarding, you've got 40 of the best women and men athletes in each area competing for Olympic medals. So it's going to be quite interesting. The street is primarily something you would see with rails and stairs and ramps. Everything you've ever seen on YouTube, baby,
Starting point is 00:40:32 right now in the Olympics. That's right. Watch me grind this out, baby, for gold. I'm sorry. Well, no, the top athlete is number one is really an American by the name of Nyjah Houston, who is all over the place. And he's, I think, you know, our best chance for gold. But we have a strong team, both on the men and the women's side. And then in the parks, you have really transitioned bull riding, bigger transitions. And you have really a good team there as well. So they're kind of two unique disciplines in skateboarding. Wait, you didn't say bull riding.
Starting point is 00:41:10 You said bowl riding. Yeah, I said bowl riding, yes. Bowl. Bowl. Okay, where the sides are curved and you sort of rock up and back and forth. I know I'm from Texas now, but, you know, it's definitely bowl riding. No hoofs and horns. So what can we expect?
Starting point is 00:41:29 What kind of tricks are we going to be seeing and what kind of language are we going to be coming away with? And what part of Newton are you using the most? That's what I want to know. Yeah. Well, I think a lot of times it's, you know, this idea of action and reaction is one of the things that comes across in the science, you know, as they're moving towards obstacles or working with the obstacles. idea of action and reaction is one of the things that comes across in the science, you know, as
Starting point is 00:41:45 they're moving towards obstacles or working with the obstacles. Going back to your, what can we expect? You know, you're going to see, I think, some really interesting things like kickflip, blunt slides down rails. You're going to see 360 flips across stairs. You're going to see in the bowls things like 540, the McTwists. You're going to see... Just to be clear, 540 is 360 plus 180? Mm-hmm. Okay, so that would be a one and a half... Half.
Starting point is 00:42:19 So I just like the geometric angular measure of this. Instead of saying it's one and a half flips, we're doing a 540. You're counting out the degrees. That's very good. Very mathematical of you. Okay. And so I think that's the big thing. And then the riders are going to have, you know, timed runs.
Starting point is 00:42:36 And they'll, you know, they'll be judged on not only their degree of difficulty, but their creativity. And then probably their amplitude and a few other categories. So you can kind of tell, you know, who's shining in those moments. But you'll see the best riders in the world. I'm just curious. So in the park portion, I'm sorry. Go ahead, Neil. Quick.
Starting point is 00:42:56 So I want to distinguish two things. When I see skateboarding and then I see in the Winter Olympics, they have the, what is it called? Snowboarding. Snowboarding. Snowboarding. Okay. Halfpipe. Yeah, in the Winter Olympics, they have the, what is it called? Snowboarding. Snowboarding. Snowboarding. Okay. Halfpipe. Yeah, in the halfpipe.
Starting point is 00:43:08 In the Winter Olympics, at all times, they are descending a hill. Okay? Whatever else they're doing in the middle of it. So they're using gravity as a force of their forward motion. Whereas in skateboarding, you are pumping your action almost the way you do on a swing, where how do you go from nothing to a big arc? You are pumping your own body energy into your motion.
Starting point is 00:43:39 So is it true that all the skateboarding you're describing, maybe other than going down the stairs, but the bowl skating, the park skateboarding, you're not going downhill. You're always pumping your own energy back into your new position. Is that correct? Yeah, that is correct. You know, you're going to be using the transitions as a way to push down them, to gain speed, and then to go up the transition to bring yourself into the air. You'll probably see very little pushing, except if someone is moving through a trick.
Starting point is 00:44:09 But they're going to be using the momentum of the obstacles to ride the bowls and to do the tricks and to create their... This is an important distinction then between the skateboarding and the snowboarding for me. Yeah. So what's the most we can expect? Yeah. So what's the most we can expect? Because I read that during quarantine, an 11-year-old threw a 1080 into on a vertical ramp.
Starting point is 00:44:33 Now, if an 11-year-old can do it, Dr. Skateboard, surely the top people in the world should be working a lot harder. Well, you know, I think... I've got to do my math. A 1080 that's four? A lot. A lot. You're welcome. In the IT world, 1080 is like the resolution 1080p. So a 1080, so Dr. Skateboard, tell me about a 1080. What is that? So a 1080 would be, you know, you go 360 is one, 720, 1080. So it'd be three revolutions or three spins, you know, on that.
Starting point is 00:45:02 And, you know, Gary, there's a discipline that's called the mega ramp. It's not in the Olympics, but it's something they do. And that's how this person was able to do that. These are much larger structures. And so, you know, you really need the bigger space to do that. But you will see things here, I mean, conceivably, you know, 540s, 720s, you'll see a lot of also motion where they're spinning, but they're also flipping their boards. So you'll see like kickflip varials, kickflip McTwists, which are, you know, where you're spinning the board of 360 and you're spinning 540. So the degree of difficulty goes way up for that. Yeah, Yeah. So, so what about, I don't know if it's going to be a part of it or not, but are the mega ramp vert drops going to be a part of the competition?
Starting point is 00:45:51 What is that? I'll let Dr. Skateboard explain it, you know, cause he's the mega ramp. In mega ramp, you have a large ramp. It's probably, I don't know, six stories up. You drop down an incline, you hit a ramp. there's a gap. It's usually 50 to 70 feet that they go across. And then they hit a huge quarter pipe, you know, which is probably 15 to 20 feet high. And then they go 15 to 20 feet high above it. And then they land and if they're successful. Wait, wait, while doing tricks, while doing tricks. Okay. So that would be, that would gravity-assisted maneuvers at that point. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:27 Yes. Got it. Yes. I guess that's in the next Olympics. They've limited, you know, the types of skateboarding. So that's one of the things I think is both a plus and a criticism is you've got these two disciplines of street and bull riding. But skateboarding is, you know, a much larger phenomenon that is actually not just a sport, it's a culture. And it extends everywhere that people live and ride their boards.
Starting point is 00:46:50 It's the hip hop of sports. It really is. So have we got any technology that's emerged in the last couple of years? Because it's been a couple of years since we last spoke. And we got into sort of like sealed bearings and things like that. But has anything new come in to make this sport even better? Yeah, Bill, in your educational circle, there's Newton's laws and then there's material science. Yeah. So where do you fold that in? Yeah. So the one thing about a skateboard is it's actually stayed pretty stable in its components since the 1970s. And specifically with the advent of urethane wheels, it really made a difference.
Starting point is 00:47:26 And, but the one thing you do see now in skateboarding is you see more customized or different designs of deck shapes. So, so people are really using the width, the length and the wheelbase of decks to, to differentiate themselves. But skateboarding has pretty much stayed the same since we last talked. You know, it's a board, two trucks, and four wheels, you know, going through this. Now, the wheels can vary in hardness. You can have the sealed bearings. But I think ultimately, it's a pretty stable technology. It's seven-ply laminate. You know, maple is typically what it's done. And then it's, you know, set under pressure to create a concave.
Starting point is 00:48:06 And that's another big difference over the years. The concave or the contours for the board have really helped riders stay on their boards rather than just a flat board itself. Plus, if it has that kind of give, the energy that goes into to deform it can be recovered when you jump off of it right as any good sort of spring action would be here's what i want in 2028 olympics i'll give it one olympic cycle to get there i want the hoverboard event okay that's what i want hoverboard they do have wait you know they do have a hoverboard. A third category. Yeah, that was actually sponsored by Lexus,
Starting point is 00:48:51 where they make a superconductor, and they make the hoverboard ride on that superconductor where it levitates above this magnetic these magnetic rails and you ride the hoverboard around their little track but it's escapeable so eight years I'll give it eight years feels right
Starting point is 00:49:16 okay Bill I don't know how you feel about hoverboards well you know so me I'm a purist. You know, I kind of grew up in the... Old school, old school. Get off my lawn. I'm an old school guy.
Starting point is 00:49:32 So, you know, I'm all about four wheels, two trucks, a board, and the ground as your... The ground. Your antagonist. I like that. So are you going to Tokyo? You know, I'm not going to Tokyo, but I've been actually been working with some of the people from USA Skateboarding. I have a couple of friends who are involved with that.
Starting point is 00:49:59 And so that it's been staying in touch about what's happening. And they're all preparing to leave here probably, I think, by July 23rd. Gotcha. So I'm delighted just first to have you on the show, but also to know that your expertise is helping sort of America try to get some medals in this inaugural event. And I think, you know, we've debated what sports maybe shouldn't be in the Olympics. That comes up often on this show. And one criterion I used was, might you have ever seen it on a Grecian urn? Like, would the Greeks have put it on an urn?
Starting point is 00:50:38 I think they would have put skateboarding on the urn. What do you guys think? Guy in a tunic with a skateboard giving you the hang loose sign. Yo, what up, bro? Okay, Neil, let's think about, if we're talking classics here, which is the ancient Greek, you think about the jumping,
Starting point is 00:50:58 long jump, triple jump, things like that, that use Newton's laws of action-reaction. Yeah, yeah. This then has to reconnect to the classic action-reaction with skateboarding. So it does have some resonance back to... Yeah, yeah. So I think the Greeks would have been cool with it, I think. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:14 Yeah, I'll give you that. Yeah. All right, dude, we got to bring this to a close. Bill Robertson, thank you. Doctor Skateboard, what a moniker that is. Is this on your business cards? Yeah, well, I do have some business cards, but you know, I've been doing it ever since I got my PhD. And you know, really my mission has been to combine education with skateboarding, to reach
Starting point is 00:51:36 out to marginalized students, but also to give, you know, pathways to success for students and education to the things they like to do. So that's really what Dr. Skateboard is all about. So you've got a TED Talk. Any other place we can find you online? Yeah, you can go to drskateboard.com. Got all. Oh, well, OK. I'm on Instagram.
Starting point is 00:51:56 Can't get any better than that. Can't get any better than that. OK. No way to find you. Very excellent. Delighted to showcase your work here. And so thanks for being on StarTalk. Thank you all for having me.
Starting point is 00:52:08 You know, Neil, it's a pleasure. Chuck, Gary, thank you so much. And it's really my honor to be associated with StarTalk. And thank you for all the good work y'all are doing. All right. All right. So this has been another sort of Olympic explainer, the inaugural appearance of skateboarding
Starting point is 00:52:25 in the Tokyo Olympics. Neil deGrasse Tyson here, your personal astrophysicist. Keep looking up.

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