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Physicists discover temperature key to avalanche movement Monday 31 January 2005
100 years after Einstein’s landmark work on Brownian motion,
physicists have discovered a new concept of temperature that could be
the key to explaining how ice and snow particles flow during an
avalanche, and could also lead to a better way of handling tablets in
the pharmaceutical industry. This research is reported today in a
special Einstein Year issue of the New Journal of Physics (www.njp.org)
published jointly by the Institute of Physics and the German Physical
Society (Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft).
Everything from
powdery snow to desert sands, from salt to corn flakes are granular
materials. Physicists have known for many years that granular materials
have many perplexing properties that make them behave at times like
solids, liquids, and even gases. This new research reveals for the
first time how to measure a concept called “granular temperature” –
that could be the key to explaining how they behave.
“Take the
solid snow covering a ski slope, for instance”, suggests lead author of
the paper Patrick Mayor of the EPFL in Lausanne, Switzerland. “While it
stays still it is a solid, but as soon as it starts flowing downhill as
happens during an avalanche the flowing material is behaving more like
a liquid. Similarly, during a desert storm, sand grains are whipped up
and behave like molecules in a gas, rather than as a solid”.
"Whereas
most materials are usually described as solid, liquid or gases,
granular systems do not seem to fall into any of these categories and
are often considered a separate state of matter of their own," says
Mayor, "The diverse behaviour of granular materials makes it extremely
difficult to establish a general theory that accounts for the observed
phenomena."
Mayor and his colleagues, Gianfranco D'Anna, Alain
Barrat, Vittorio Loreto, have shown that shaken granular matter behaves
in a way related to Einstein's theory of Brownian motion, first
published in 1905. The temperature of an object reflects the
random motion of its constituent parts. For instance, the faster the
molecules in a gas or liquid are moving around the higher the
temperature of the material.
Temperature also measures the
degree of agitation of molecules in a liquid or a gas. Mayor and his
colleagues have now devised a thermometer that can measure the
temperature of a granular material based on the degree of agitation of
its component particles. The researchers also discovered that, unlike
usual liquids, temperature varies depending on which way and how far
they insert the "thermometer" into the granular material.
Being
able to measure "granular temperature" might allow researchers to
better understand the peculiar properties of a granular material, which
is of crucial importance to industries that handle powders and
particulate materials from pharmaceutical pills and food powders to
sand and cement in the construction industry.
Further information:
This research is published in New Journal of Physics as part of a celebratory focus issue on: Brownian Motion and Diffusion in the 21st Century
2005 is Einstein Year. Find out more about Einstein Year events in your area here
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