An estimated 4.1 million people in the United States participate in
recreational sailing. Yet the large library of sailing literature leaves
many of them high and dry. On one side are technical guides for
America's Cup boat-builders; on the other, simplistic books for weekend
sailors with little interest in science. In Float Your Boat!
professional and amateur boaters alike will find intelligent and
understandable answers to such questions as: What were the key
innovations that made sailboats more efficient? How do you increase the
speed of a boat? How do sailboats travel into the wind? Why are so many
explanations of sailing so wrong?
Sailing enthusiast and physicist Mark Denny first traces the evolution
of the sailing craft, from prehistoric coracles made of animal skins and
antlers to the sailboat's reinvention as a pleasure craft during the
Industrial Revolution. He then identifies specific sailing
phenomena--how wind drives modern Bermuda sloops, how torque determines
stability, why hull speed exists--and provides the key physics
principles behind them.
Whether you are an inquisitive landlubber who has never set foot in a
boat, a casual weekend sailor, or an old salt who lives for the sea,
Float Your Boat! is an accessible guide to the physics of sailing.