The 'easyJet ecoJet'¯ would emit 50 percent less CO2 than today's newest ...
Environment
Sandcastle Physics Revealed
By Bjorn Carey, LiveScience Staff Writer
posted: 29 September 2005 08:50 am ET
Anyone who has built sandcastles learns they hold up best if a little water is mixed with the building material. But until now scientists couldn’t agree why.
Water holds grains of sand together by forming “liquid-bridges” between the contact points of the grains, a new study finds. The tension forces of the bridges creates an attractive force between the grains that is absent in dry sand.
Sarah Nowak of MIT and colleagues at Clark University put sand in a hollow rotating drum.
As the drum turned, the sand would build up in a pile until it reached the maximum angle of stability – the steepest slope a pile can achieve before it collapsed. When it collapsed, the researchers measured the slope of the pile post-collapse, called the angle of repose.
They found that the addition of even miniscule amounts of water greatly increased the sand grains’ ability to stick to one another, which allowed the pile to stay together at steeper angles and collapse less drastically than when the sand was dry.
And some of the bridges stayed intact after the collapse. You can see this on the beach when a sandcastle falls apart in clumps held together by moisture instead of rolling sheets of dry sand.
The results are detailed in the October issue of the journal Nature Physics.
Sand interests physicists because it, or any collection of macroscopic solid grains, exhibits both liquid and solid characteristics.
“For example, dry sand in a bucket can be poured like a fluid, but it can also support the weight of a rock placed on top – even if the rock is denser than the sand,” Peter Schiffer of Pennsylvania State University wrote in an accompanying analysis in the journal.
Understanding the interactions between dry grains and liquids is vital not just for building sandcastles, but for industries ranging from mining to pharmaceutical development.
For sandcastle builders, the best mix, it turns out, is one pail of water for every eight pails of sand.
Most Popular
- Recommended
- Commented
Community
- From Our Blogs
-
From Our Blogs
Animals
Marketplace Links
- Meet the HP ProLiant DL385 G5
- The HP ProLiant DL385 G5 server helps reduce resources and lets you manage systems-or collaborate-remotely
- Science. Technology. Sustainability.
- Visit the new Innovation Channel on LiveScience.com.
- One-stop destination for the lowest domestic airfares
- Search all airlines, including Southwest now!
- Get a free brochure
- Go exploring with the best ice team on earth. Polar bears or penguins? Choose now! expeditions.com/ice
- HP
- The HP portfolio of server solutions helps you push the envelope-without pushing your budget to the brink. ProLiant technology, affordably priced.
- LiveScience Store
- Find everything from weird science to cool gadgets!
- Don't toss it, Recycle it!
- Find local recycling centers now
- Feel Strongly About Energy Options?
- Speak your mind about technologies and innovations in our forums.
- BP
- There’s energy security in energy diversity.
- Facing a Dilemma? Let Geek Logik help.
- Use Algebra to inform your decisions
- HP
- Protect and store your business's critical data with HP All-in-One and Disk-Based backup systems





