
Scientists report the best way to make a huge splash when jumping in a pool
Scientists report the best way to make a huge splash when jumping in a pool A unique and fiendishly difficult type of diving has been perfected by the Māori of New Zealand. It can shoot out 32-foot water jets.
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At US Olympic diving trials, Olympians will pass down their rings
When a diver qualifies for the Paris Games at the U.S. diving trials, former Olympians will pass down a token to the next generation.
Sure, there's the bellyflop. The cannonball. The bomb. But for the biggest pool splash of all, nothing beats "popping a Manu," a unique and fiendishly difficult type of diving perfected by the Māori of New Zealand that can shoot up 32-foot water jets.
The decades-old cultural tradition is so popular that there's an annual world championship held in Auckland with cash prizes, the most recent of several such events over the past two decades.
Now, scientists at the Georgia Institute of Technology have worked out the mechanics of exactly what these divers are doing to create their massive splashes – and it's a far cry from the simplicity of a belly buster.
"It's very difficult to master, it can be quite dangerous, and it requires millisecond control," said Pankaj Rohilla, a postdoctoral researcher and co-author on the paper "Mastering the Manu—how humans create large splashes," published on May 19.
The Georgia Tech team of fluid dynamics and biomechanics experts spent months working on the problem.
Learning the mechanics involved analyzing more than 75 videos of people doing manu jumps, then taking lab members to Georgia Tech's pool to do more than 50 trial jumps, all filmed in high definition to capture exactly what their bodies were doing at each millisecond.
Finally, researcher and co-author Daehyun Choi built a "Manubot," a hand-sized robot that could mimic a diver's body movements during a manu jump to test what exact angle was best to create the biggest possible movement of water.
Making the biggest splash possible
What Māori jumpers have perfected turns out to involve specific movements all done within as little as 0.14 seconds of each other — and the exact opposite of the techniques taught to traditional divers, as seen every four years during the Olympics.
"It's all about making a V-shape with your body during water entry and then a specific set of underwater body dynamics," said Rohilla.
Specifically, the best manu jumpers form a perfect 45-degree V with their bodies in the air. Then, as soon as they touch the water's surface, the diver rolls back and kicks to straighten their body out.
This expands the air cavity created when their body enters the water. The height of the splash corresponds to the size of that cavity. The time of cavity collapse is known as the "pinch-off time." Gravitational forces push the water back in the vertical direction, generating an upward jet of water.
"It's basically about how much energy you're trapping underwater," said Rohilla.
Technically, the initial splash created by the diver's body entering the water is called the crown splash, while the second, caused by the collapsing air cavity, is called a Worthington jet.
It requires extreme body control and split-second timing. The V-shape of the body has to be a 45-degree angle to create the fastest and highest Worthington jet, while ensuring the diver's safety.
The roll back and kick motion must occur within 0.14 to 0.15 seconds of entering the water when the diver is jumping from 3 meters, said Rohilla. That's about 10 feet high.
The higher the jump, the shorter the time the diver has to perform the roll back and kick.
"It looks easy but it's actually very challenging," he said.
Manu diving can hurt
The researchers caution that the manu maneuver is not only difficult but can be risky and painful.
"The higher you jump, the less reaction time you have. So it can be quite dangerous," said Rohilla.
Especially if you miss the landing shape of 45 degrees, the water can slap the diver's back with a lot of force.
"That hurt a few of our teammates. It was very painful," Rohilla said. "You could even hurt your spine, so it can be a risky sport."
Manu diving has been banned in some pools in New Zealand, including one area where a child was injured.
A Māori cultural sport
The sport back at least several decades and has become an important cultural tradition in New Zealand.
The name most likely comes from the Māori word "manu" which means bird, though some suggest it's a shortened form of Māngere, a suburb of Auckland where the sport is popular.
It's gone from something people did for fun to showing off their prowess as a competitive sport. In 2024, the first Manu World Championships were held in New Zealand's capital, Wellington. Other competitions appeared to have been held dating back to at least 2011.
In Wellington this year, more than $23,000 in prize money is on the line. Jump heights range from three feet above the water for children to as high as 16 feet for adults.
Divers can compete in the traditional manu style of the V-Bomb, but new styles have also been introduced, including The Gorilla, the Cannonball, and The Coffin.
The competition uses high-tech cameras to calculate the splash height of each diver to ensure fair scoring.
'Thousands and thousands of hours of practice'
The fun of manu diving is making a huge splash, something people love given the quantity of splashes observed wherever children play in pools.
It's also the exact opposite of the clean, minimal splash demanded in competitive diving, where scoring depends, in part, on producing the smallest possible splash as the diver plunges into the water.
"We call it 'ripping,'" said Phil Tonne, a dive coach at the University of California, Davis. "The least amount of splash correlates to the highest scores."
Making no splash is as hard as making a big splash. "You want to be as streamlined as you can possibly get," Tonne said. "It takes thousands and thousands of hours of practice."
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My beloved Amazon Echo pop Last year, an ADHD content creator finally convinced me to get an Echo dot, and it's truly the best thing I've ever used for remembering all the things I need to do. Every Monday, I look at my calendar and just shout out when all my meetings are and Echo automatically reminds me of them throughout the week. I have it remind me of birthdays, dinners, random errands I need to run or calls I need to make. I resisted this purchase for so long and I wish I hadn't. Promising review: "With ADHD and now physical illness it is really hard to keep track of appointments and basically remember things I have to do, dates etc. I have a much better chance of remembering things if I have a voice pop up and remind me instead of just relying on things written down. It's great to have it when something pops into my head at night and I just yell out to Alexa to remind me instead of getting out of bed to look for my glasses, pen and paper. Besides turning on and off lamps, alarms, checking the weather and more I'm sure I'm forgetting. It's Affordable and works great." —susan l. sediaGet it from Amazon for $39.99 (available in four colors). Or a visual Amazon Echo show Kind of like an Alexa and a tablet combined, this interactive touch-screen Alexa Echo show device works as a smart hub in your house, linking all your smart home devices and giving you a screen to see your calendar, the weather and even your security cameras. Use voice control to turn off your connected lights or to make a running grocery list through the week. Enjoy Netflix and other streaming channels, music and podcasts, video chatting and even use it as a digital picture frame to show off family memories. Promising review: "I don't think I could live without my echo show. So easy to find out anything and timer and reminders are priceless. Highly recommend especially for gifts." —LilyGet it from Amazon for $149.99 (available in two colors). 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It was too pricey to paint my car neon yellow so I tried leaving a cube tracker in the care and more lost hours wandering parking lots looking like a lost senior citizen. Best gift my brother ever gave me." —Twin4meGet it from Lowe's for $99.95. A stick-on medicine tracker Did I take my meds? It's an all too familiar question that I ask myself many times a day. This ingenious pair of trackers sticks onto your bottle to let you mark if you've taken your meds for the day. They're reusable and simply stick onto the review: "I have a problem remembering if I took a pill or not. This is very helpful!" —PlaceholderGet them from Amazon for $12.99 (available in two colors). An Alexa-controlled light bulb Lights are a pretty classic forgetting hot spot. You forget to turn them off. Or you forget to keep them on when you know you're coming home late. Whatever the case, this smart bulb connects with your Alexa and the Alexa app, letting you use voice control to turn lights on and off or control them with the app to ensure your lights are how you want them even when you're not home. You can even set them on timers so you don't have to remember anything at all. Promising review: "I've resisted implementing 'smart home' things for years now, but the absolute convenience can't be denied. Long story short: I work nights and having this as my front porch light is so nice. Everything can be controlled from the app and it's no big deal if I forget to turn it off. Won't be getting all the smart home stuff, but a few lightbulbs to make my life easier can't hurt in my opinion. And the best part is being able to turn it on and off even if I'm not at home. Just get it. Setup is SO EASY and took me longer to screw in the lightbulb than it did for my Alexa app to recognize that there was a new device lol" —DanniGet it from Amazon for $11.99+ (available in three styles and as a four-pack). A set of Kasa smart plugs Speaking of turning things off and on, another top-seller here, Kasa smart plugs feel like another no-brainer for helpful reminder tools. Simply plug them into any outlet in your home and transform that into a "smart" outlet that you can control via your phone or voice and even set to turn on and off at specific times. Never stress about if you turned off your lights or hair straightener again or have to run back to your house to be sure your space heater is off. Promising review: "I use these for my lights and wax warmers. I love that my warmers are on a timer so I don't have to remember to go and turn them on and off every day." —GinaGet a four-pack from Amazon for $23.99. 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This handy water bottle comes in a bunch of fun colors and gives you encouragement and a little visual help to continue to get your H2O fill through the review: "I am really bad at remembering to drink water in the day and this water bottle has easily gotten me in the habit of drinking water throughout the day! I use it every day, it's easy to clean and comfortable to drink with!" —Brandy FosterGet it from Amazon for $9.99+ (available in eight styles). A to-do list with all the lists In writing this story, I found this many-list list pad and was so charmed I added it to my own cart and needed to put it here. If you too have a busy brain, this sheet so perfectly lets you jot down all the different things going on through a single day from appointments to review: "I have a hard time keeping track of multiple to-dos and appointments and such. I've tried keeping planners and every other organizational system a 'normal' person could come up with, and I always end up losing something important in the jumble. I realized I was basically keeping multiple lists because they felt like 'different categories,' but juggling multiple lists can get confusing/overwhelming and it's easy to forget something. This puts them all in one place, categorized, and it's right out in the open (a common thing with ADHD is 'out of sight, out of mind' and planners are difficult because once they're closed it's like the stuff you wrote inside doesn't exist and you forget to open it and things get forgotten). TLDR; definitely recommend if you're a *multiple lists* type of person." — MileenaGet it from Amazon for $5.53. Or a set of eight magnetic note pads Old-school notepads are another classic. 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I was tired of putting notes in my phone because I hand write faster and hand writing helps me remember things better, but love having the digital access to notes. This solved my problem! I've wiped and reused several times with the included microfiber cloth and it looks like new after. Sometimes when you erase the Frixion pens the eraser leave behind a residue and the pen has trouble writing over that but after wiping with water the paper is fine and the pen writes perfectly. I love the Executive size (PERFECT to carry in a purse) but I love this so much that I want to get the larger size for at home too. I bought the turquoise color and it's really pretty. The app is really easy to use too, and the scans turn out great! I love this notebook and I'm so happy I don't need to spend all the money on sticky notes and traditional notebooks anymore or use all that paper for notes I don't need a hard copy of. I've recommended this to everybody I know and my sister bought one the day after I showed her mine. I'm a forever fan of the Rocketbook now!" —EmilyGet it from Amazon for $28.58+ (available in two styles and 13 colors). A clear, acrylic calendar A calendar is another pretty classic item that still feels worthwhile to put on this list. This clear option is good-looking and unobtrusive and can go on your fridge without making it look too busy to the eye. Use different colors for each of your family members to keep track of everyone's review: "This is a great addition. Clean looking. Family all onboard for weekly meals and any important things to remember!" —The Cfam ClanGet it from Amazon for $13.99 (also available in eight other styles and a smaller size).