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Trousers that let you scale walls scientifically possible!

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Press Trust of India London
Scientists have found that the trousers in the Wallace & Gromit film titled 'The Wrong Trousers' which let the wearer walk on ceilings and walls are scientifically possible for a short period of time.

In the 1993 film 'The Wrong Trousers' Gromit receives a pair of NASA robotic Techno Trousers from Wallace for his birthday which allows for its wearer to walk on walls.

Physics students from the University of Leicester have found that scaling walls and ceilings using the technology would indeed be scientifically possible, albeit for a short period of time.

The group of fourth year students from the Department of Physics and Astronomy examined what suction is required to allow a fully grown man wearing the trousers to walk on the ceiling without losing contact.
 

They calculated that the vacuum generator in the boots of the trousers, if powerful enough, would allow for a level of suction that could allow people to see the world upside down.

"To walk on walls and ceilings it will be necessary for the trousers to be able function with only one of the boots in contact with the ceiling as well as both," said student Katie Raymer, from Whitstable.

"All the simple calculations in the study were worked out with one boot supporting all the weight.

"In order for the vacuum generator in the sole of the boots to work, we assumed there is a slightly raised rubber insulator surrounding the boot of the trousers.

"This would create a cavity which has a lower pressure than the surroundings when the vacuum is applied.

"We observed the difference in pressure between the atmosphere and the cavity and found that the vacuum generator needs to be powerful enough to reduce the atmospheric pressure inside the boot cavity by approximately 18 per cent in order to create a vacuum capable of supporting Wallace and the trousers.

"This corresponds to a low vacuum, which has a similar strength to a vacuum cleaner," Raymer said.

"Although this is a feasible vacuum required, the main issue that arises is that the trousers operate from a rechargeable battery," student Ben Jordan, from Bury St Edmunds, added.

"So by making a quick comparison with a wireless vacuum cleaner with a similar strength, the operating time would only be around 20 minutes," Jordan said.

In the film, Gromit uses the trousers to help him paint the ceiling - and in this scenario the trousers could be connected to a mains electricity supply and would function well, researchers said.

However, the trousers are also used to scale a building and steal a diamond from the city museum, which would likely take considerably longer than 20 minutes in real life.

The students presented their findings in a paper for the Journal of Physics Special Topics, a peer-reviewed student journal run by the University's Department of Physics and Astronomy.

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First Published: Jun 29 2014 | 3:15 PM IST

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