Is it possible to get headphones with cords that don't tangle up?

Short of going wireless, are there any headphones out there that are determined to tangle up into a ball of frustration?


Asked by: Robin Liddle, Manchester

The ability of flex, rope, cord or anything stringy to become hopelessly tangled is one of life’s familiar frustrations. Now some headphone makers have started fitting their products with flat, ribbon-like flex that they claim combats the menace.

The explanation lies in a branch of mathematics known as self-avoiding random walk theory. This focuses on the properties of random paths in three dimensions. These are what headphone flex follows when you shove it in your pocket. In 1988, mathematicians discovered that flex following such random paths is virtually certain to form a knot. The remedy is to stop the flex performing such contortions. Like ordinary flex, ribbon-like flex can bend easily – but only in two dimensions; its thickness makes it less able to bend in the third dimension. As knots require free movement in all three dimensions, this makes ribbon flex less prone to knotting.

See our round-up:

Subscribe to BBC Focus magazine for fascinating new Q&As every month and follow @sciencefocusQA on Twitter for your daily dose of fun science facts.