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By Garth Sundem | March 23rd 2009 06:00 AM | 7 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
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About Garth Sundem

Do you need a Monday morning shot of geekery?

If so, you've come to the right place. Every Monday, early, I'll drop splendid geekery from the fields of physics, math, computer science, zoology


... Full Bio

If you haven’t the infinite ammo of the late Hunter S. Thompson or the lightning-fast trigger finger (and impressive spray radius) of a recent Vice President, it actually takes considerable skill to shoot a fish in a barrel (exact difficulty proportional to size of barrel and fish depth and inversely proportional to size of fish). Some of this trickiness is due to refraction, or the change in speed and thus direction of light waves as they move from air to water.

Wait a minute!? Isn’t the speed of light constant?

Yes. But only in a vacuum.

If you shoot light through glass, it travels only 0.67 times its original speed and if you shoot light through water it travels only 0.75 times its speed in a vacuum (in beer, light travel 0.74 times as fast, though one would imagine this to differ slightly from, say, porter to pilsner...hmmm, research needed).

And the more you slam on the brakes, the more light changes direction. You can see this when you stick a straw in a glass.

Refraction is also responsible for rainbows: as white sunlight refracts through atmospheric water, each frequency contained within this white light adopts a slightly different speed and thus refracts slightly more or less, spreading out into the immediately recognizable ROY-G-BIV spectrum.

Thus, as seen in the diagram, if you are trying to shoot a fish at position R, it—in fact—appears at position L and you will need to aim lower than it appears in order to hit it.

Note: shooting fish drastically decreases the chance of successful catch and release.

Join me every Monday morning for more grandtastic goodies from The Geeks' Guide to World Domination. Or if you like your geekery delivered fresh, consider subscribing to my rss feed or joining my Facebook Fan Page.

Comments


"Thus, as seen in the diagram, if you are trying to shoot a fish at
position R, it—in fact—appears at position L and you will need to aim
lower than it appears in order to hit it."

Aim higher if it is at this position.

And if you decide to shoot fish in a barrel, do this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pd-MpXCMcIs

Garth Sundem's picture
Aaron, you're right. That's a typo. My fault. Sweet link, by the way.
Cheers,
G

rholley's picture
Interestingly, while Huygens and Fermat regarded light as travelling more slowly in the dense medium, Descartes and Newton thought it speeded up.

For a bit more on this, read Get a Slice of the Least Action! (you may skip the intro.)

logicman's picture
Has anyone here actually tried, shooting fish in a barrel?
It is rather fun - you see, when the gun is fired, the recoil spins your barrel round and round and  ...
Oh, I seeee !

Ambiguity is so useful for giving words an extra spin.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pd-MpXCMcIs (Mythbusters clip)

actually, someone did try shooting fish in a barrel, and recorded it.

Check out the full episode for more details, but I believe the result was:
Difficult to HIT the fish with the bullets, but the shock wave of bullet hitting water in a confined space tends to kills the fish if you hit them or not.
Oh, and bullets deflect quite a bit in water anyway.

Garth Sundem's picture
Yep, that's the same link Aaron sent. But thanks—it's even sweeter the second time. I guess the experiment as blogged is more practically appropriate for smoking fish with ray weaponry.
Cheers,
G

logicman's picture
more practically appropriate for smoking fish with ray weaponry


Yup!  The infra-red grill is a wonderful piece of technology!

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