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Dolphin Rings

Oct 2, 2008 1:39 am Report Abuse

This video is of dolphins playing with silver colored rings, made of air, which they have the ability to make under water to play with. It isn't known how they learned this, or if they're born with the ability.

As if by magic, the dolphin does a quick flip of its head and a silver ring appears in front of its beak. The ring is a solid, donut shaped bubble about 2-ft across, yet it doesn't rise to the surface of the water. It stands upright in the water like a magic doorway to an unseen dimension. The dolphin then pulls a small silver donut from the larger one. Looking at the twisting ring for one last time, a bite is taken from it, causing the small ring to collapse into thousands of tiny bubbles which head upward towards the water's surface. After a few moments the dolphin creates another ring to play with. There also seems to be a separate mechanism for producing small rings, which a dolphin can accomplish by a quick flip of its head.

An explanation of how dolphins make these silver rings is that they are "air-core vortex rings". Invisible, spinning vortices in the water are generated from the tip of a dolphin's dorsal fin when it is moving rapidly and turning. When dolphins break the line, the ends are drawn together into a closed ring. The higher velocity fluid at the core of the vortex is at a lower pressure than the fluid circulating farther away. Air is injected into the rings via bubbles released from the dolphin's blowhole. The energy of the water vortex is enough to keep the bubbles from rising for a few seconds of play time.


5 comments


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SilentBobAK47 Oct 2, 2008 1:43 am
That's so cool.
p0ker_j0ker Oct 2, 2008 1:45 am
Thats so fn cool
Annie-up Oct 2, 2008 1:53 am
Thanks loved watching it , cool video.
konawajim Oct 2, 2008 2:19 am
Wow very interesting stuff there David
Wildfire41 Oct 2, 2008 2:34 am
that is so amazing...thanks for sharing it....wicked cool

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