Hot Air, and Compressibility 









A’course air is compressible, and so is water.   Any kid who fools around with 
bicycle pump or a shock absorber, and believes what he sees, rather than what 
he is told, can feel the compressibility.   But, but, but, at modest speeds 
free air will NOT compress and prefers to “run away” rather than doing so.   
For example, if you sweep your hand through the air, the flow runs away and, 
although the pressure on your palm is higher than static, there is virtually no 
compression of the fluid.   You have to sweep your hand at a speed comparable 
to that of sound (about 330 m/s here on earth) in order stop the air from 
getting away and to achieve any compression.   Since, according to my latest 
studies on musculature, the maximum speed of an Olympic discus hurler is about 
33 m/s, we’re not likely to experience that.   Anyhow, the effective 
incompressibility of air is taught Day 1 in Aerodynamics 101!   The reason WHY 
is reserved for four years later in grad school! 





  

Surely anyone who can read today has heard of the “sound barrier” or seen the 
movie, if you can’t read.    Many folks in the West have experienced a sonic 
boom.   All this has been known since 1890 and was described, analyzed and 
measured by   Herr Doktor Ernst Mach, a product of that golden milieu of 
scientific thinkers, the old Austro-Hungarian Empire.     Mach was a rare bird, 
being an intelligent philosopher who discussed physics with   Einstein.   H e 
didn’t agree with Special  Relativity.   Wrong there, Ernie!   Some people have 
heard of his number – certainly all test pilots.   I instructed many in the 
Navy.   I painfully learned this stuff, and used the   instrument Mach 
invented, the Schlieren, in my early days as a grad student, battling with 
shock waves in a grimy subterranean Wizard’s Cave, the Hypersonics Lab, not at, 
but underneath Caltech! 





  

All the above info I stand behind, and have published on.   It’s not conjecture 
or anecdote.   I don’t discuss things I don’t understand.   Like most 
scientists, I am an ignorant fellow, oblivious to the vast majority of human 
knowledge, but enjoy being enlightened by folks who do know.   It is not dumb 
not to know things, but it is to think that your own knowledge encompasses 
physical truth on subjects on which you are ignorant. 





  

Peter Lissaman, Da Vinci Ventures 

Expertise is not knowing everything, but knowing what to look for. 

1454 Miracerros Loop South, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505,USA 
tel:(505)983-7728 
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