Erosion(侵蚀) caused by flowing water does not only smooth out objects, but can also form distinct shapes with sharp points and edges, a team of New York University researchers has found. Their findings, which appear in the latest edition of the journal the
Proceedings1 of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), reveal the unexpected ways that erosion can affect landscapes and artificial materials. The impact of erosion is widely recognized by environmentalists and
geologists2, but less clear is how nature's elements,
notably3 water and air, work to shape land, rocks, and artificial structures, often resulting in unusual formations.
"The main focus of this study was to understand how and why erosion makes these funny shapes," explained Leif Ristroph, a post-doctoral researcher at NYU's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences and one of the study's co-authors.
To explore these questions, the researchers designed an experiment, conducted in the Courant Institute's
Applied4 Mathematics Laboratory, to
replicate5 natural erosion. In it, the researchers
submerged(水下的) clay -- shaped as balls or
cylinders7 -- into a 15-ft. long water tunnel. The
apparatus8 was designed to continuously generate a uniform flow of water, which would allow the researchers to observe how erosion shapes an entire object.
What they found was water flow acts as a
shearing9 force -- not unlike a nail file -- against objects, working them into specific shapes. Starting from a clay ball, the flowing water
sheared10 the sides away, producing a
cone11 with a
pointed12 face. Likewise, the clay
cylinder6 was
sculpted13 into a
triangular14 shape. The researchers then sought to confirm these findings by
replicating15 the experiment using a computer model. These results were consistent with the experimental findings, revealing in a computer simulation how the shape was maintained as the body
eroded16 away.
"Water acts
tangentially17 to the surface of objects and skims off material to create these unique shapes," explained Ristroph. "In a sense, it works as a
sculptor18 to naturally mold materials into new forms."
The study's other co-authors were: Matthew Moore, a Courant post-doctoral fellow; Courant Professors Stephen Childress and Michael Shelley; and Jun Zhang, a professor at the Courant Institute and NYU's Department of Physics.
The research was supported by grants from the U.S. Department of Energy (DE-FG02-88ER25053) and the National Science Foundation (DMS-1103876, MRI-0821520).