David Hu, an associate professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology; and his mechanical engineering PhD student, Guillermo Amador, have been studying the different ways in which cats and other animals keep themselves clean, according to The Huffington Post. They hope that by studying how these animals actually groom themselves to discover more efficient ways to keep spaceships, robots, and other man-made objects maintained and clean.
Hu’s team at Georgia Tech classified the different, and often weird, ways 27 different mammals and insects kept themselves clean, comparing the “non-renewable” cleaning methods which require some animals to use their own energy — like dogs shaking water off their backs — to the more efficient ways some animals clean themselves.
“They don’t do anything extra to stay clean. It just happens,” Amador said of these self-cleaning machines. It’s these “just happens” ways that could be helpful to many companies, if they can be replicated.
The team first measured how much surface area each animal is working to keep clean, finding that the hairier an animal is, the larger its true surface area and the more difficult it is to maintain its clean. The team reported that hair and fur adds 100 times more area than just skin alone.
“A honeybee’s true surface area is the size of a piece of toast,” Hu wrote. “A cat’s is the size of a ping pong table. A sea otter has as much area as a professional hockey rink.”
The team then focused on the ways in which hair and fur helps animals stay clean. They discovered that eyelashes were key to the process of “protect[ing] mammals by minimizing airflow and funneling particles away from eyes.”
While the information Hu and his team found has not been put to use on NASA’s Mars Rover just yet, he did say that by collecting this data, they will be able to develop better and more efficient ways to keep these man-made objects clean.
We cat lovers have always known that cats are the purr-fect creatures! If you ask us, science and evolution both have a lot catching up to do!