Thursday, February 24, 2011
Secrets of Swimming in Sand Revealed
Using a lizard, a snaky robot and computer simulations, researchers have captured the secrets of swimming through sand.
Physicists filmed the movements of lizards and snake-like robots as they burrowed through sand, then boiled their motion down into a numerical theory. The theory ultimately led to a computer model that can emulate the fluid-like physics of sand and objects that can swim through it.
The scientists first explored sand-swimming motion by studying sandfish lizards, also known as Scincus scincus. The reptiles are native to North-African deserts and can quickly burrow into sand to escape predators and scorching heat.
The team found sine-wave-like movement allows the lizard, and their robot, to push forward in sand, but creating computer models for the experiments proved problematic. Simulating all of the tiny sand grains required a lot of money to purchase time on powerful computers. So, the team performed the same experiments using 3-millimeter-wide glass beads instead of sand.
Read more in the original article here.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment