I agree science always has to be in question. But you have to start from a place where you are asking reasonable questions. If you don't, you can go down the totally wrong path. Like that picture you posted. Looking at that isolation could do that.Sorry jackdaw, but I happen to believe science should always be in question. Our history of what we claim, believe, accept as scientifically sound supports a more sceptical approach.
I had a retired chemist/atheist tell me the origins of the universe was settled science. That was his argument.
Im this case, I'm incline tip believe you. That doesn't mean I know what the science is and I always need more than just a statement that is akin to "because it is", I need understanding.
From what little I know, looking at those images, a larger leading edged headsail is going to make more difference than a more efficient main.
I'll agree with you that I'm wrong but, I still don't know why I'm wrong.
- Will (Dragonfly)
OK I'll give it to you straight. ;^)
For any given sail area, models and real-life testing has shown that a non-overlapping fractional sailplan provides the best lift/area ratio. Working together as one foil maximizes the given area.
Truth be told, the people at the deep end of the science are not totally clear on all the 'whys', so AFAICT there is no absolute 'proof' for this. But the same is true for gravity, but I'm not walking off any buildings anytime soon either!