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Shoelace Science

Meredith Rizzo/NPR

Stronger (left): Crossing laces in opposite directions

Weaker (right): Crossing laces in the same direction

 

You tie your shoelaces, but before you know it, they’ve come undone. Why? A team led by Oliver O’Reilly, a mechanical engineer at the University of California, Berkeley, may have unraveled the mystery.

The researchers used a high-speed camera and motion sensors to study how people’s movements cause laces to loosen. They found that the impact of a person’s feet striking the ground gradually weakens shoelaces’ knots. And the swinging of the legs creates forces that tug at the laces’ ends.

A stronger knot can help laces stay in place longer, says O’Reilly, but “the combination of forces means that most knots will eventually come undone.”

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