Although they are an inanimate collection of objects, sand dunes can 'communicate' with each other. Researchers from the University of Cambridge have discovered that as they shift, sand dunes interact with and repel their sand dune neighbors downstream.
[Another sand dunes post?! Yes, it's true that Dunes hold a special place in my heart and in the heart of Maizie. On Sunday, on a blue-sky 75 degree F day, Maizie dug happily in a big sand pit on our walk as I thought "We need to get back to the Great Sand Dunes (above) in southern Colorado." Of course, today is not that day as it was -5 degrees F this morning. An 80 degree F swing? Yes, indeed. See above photo from the National Park Service.]
"Using an experimental dune 'racetrack', the team observed that two identical dunes start out close together, but over time they get further and further apart. This interaction is controlled by turbulent swirls from the upstream dune, which push the downstream dune away. The results, reported in the journal Physical Review Letters, are key for the study of long-term dune migration, which threatens shipping channels, increases desertification, and can bury infrastructure such as highways.
When a pile of sand is exposed to wind or water flow, it forms a dune shape and starts moving downstream with the flow. Sand dunes, whether in deserts, on river bottoms or sea beds, rarely occur in isolation and instead usually appear in large groups, forming striking patterns known as dune fields or corridors."
"Active sand dunes migrate. Generally speaking, the speed of a dune is inverse to its size: smaller dunes move faster and larger dunes move slower. What hasn't been understood is if and how dunes within a field interact with each other."
"There are different theories on dune interaction: one is that dunes of different sizes will collide, and keep colliding, until they form one giant dune, although this phenomenon has not yet been observed in nature," said Dr. Karol Bacik of Cambridge's Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, and the paper's first author. "Another theory is that dunes might collide and exchange mass, sort of like billiard balls bouncing off one another, until they are the same size and move at the same speed, but we need to validate these theories experimentally."
Now, Dr. Bacik and his Cambridge colleagues have shown results that question these explanations. "We've discovered physics that hasn't been part of the model before," said Dr. Nathalie Vriend, who led the research.
Dr. Bacik hadn't originally meant to study the interaction between two dunes: "Originally, I put multiple dunes in the tank just to speed up data collection, but we didn't expect to see how they started to interact with each other," he said.
"The two dunes started with the same volume and in the same shape. As the flow began to move across the two dunes, they started moving. "Since we know that the speed of a dune is related to its height, we expected that the two dunes would move at the same speed," said Vriend, who is based at the BP Institute for Multiphase Flow. "However, this is not what we observed."
Initially, the front dune moved faster than the back dune, but as the experiment continued, the front dune began to slow down, until the two dunes were moving at almost the same speed.
Crucially, the pattern of flow across the two dunes was observed to be different: the flow is deflected by the front dune, generating 'swirls' on the back dune and pushing it away. "The front dune generates the turbulence pattern which we see on the back dune," said Vriend. "The flow structure behind the front dune is like a wake behind a boat, and affects the properties of the next dune."
As the experiment continued, the dunes got further and further apart, until they form an equilibrium on opposite sides of the circular flume, remaining 180 degrees apart.
The next step for the research is to find quantitative evidence of large-scale and complex dune migration in deserts, using observations and satellite images. By tracking clusters of dunes over long periods, we can observe whether measures to divert the migration of dunes are effective or not.
Steph
Alas, the picture above that looks like it should be a video isn't.
ReplyDeleteMakes sense that air flow over a dune should affect the dune in its lee. Like slow-motion sailboat racing.
There are several places with names like "wandering dunes" or "walking dunes". The plural form suggests they like taking walks together, which is always nice.
Thanks for letting me know, Jan. I will see what I can do to fix it.
DeleteThe circular flume video is pretty cool. Hope you could see that one.
SNOW MOON
ReplyDeleteLike Obi-Wan Kenobi said: "That's snow moon. It's a space station."
DeleteDune flume video OK now.
The moon does not disappoint tonight! Whoa.
DeleteMy niece is a bioscientist at the Gladstone Institutes in SF; she pointed me to this briefing (from yesterday) on the new 2019-nCoV coronavirus outbreak. Super timely. I thought it was pretty interesting. Amazing how fast they're getting into the fine details of this virus. Among the points I hadn't known previously:
ReplyDeleteThough bats are the primary reservoir for this coronavirus, there is likely an unknown secondary host, intermediate between bats and humans, as was civets for SARS and camels for MERS. Looks like no direct bat-to-human transmission.
Genomic analysis of all the samples isolated from humans seems to indicate that there was just *A SINGLE* initial case of animal-to-human transmission of this virus. All subsequent cases were apparently spread from person to person.
The virus seems to bind to the angiotensin converting enzyme receptor on the surface of respiratory epithelial cells (though it's still unknown whether it binds elsewhere). My naive question, as a former family practice PA, is whether the widely-available, inexpensive angiotensin converting enzyme receptor blockers commonly used to treat hypertension (e.g., losartan, aka Cozaar) could be used clinically to prevent binding of the new coronavirus?
Another briefing from yesterday, from Anthony Fauci, via JAMA. More of a public health perspective; not nearly as interesting, I think, as the molecular side presented in the Gladstone talk above, but when Fauci talks, it's usually worth listening.
DeleteFascinating. I am listening right now to the first video as we have a SNOW DAY...The secondary host aspect is intriguing.
DeleteI believe your angiotensin idea has merit; certainly worth investigating.
Thanks for sharing.
^^^ edited: I believe your angiotensin idea about the drug losartan has merit; certainly worth investigating.
DeleteIt appears that some investigators are considering ARBs as therapeutics for the new coronavirus.
DeleteOn the other hand, the fact that elderly, with cardiovascular comorbidities, are greatest risk may suggest an opposite approach.
I was unaware that ACE inhibitors and ARBs may up-regulate expression of angiotensin converting enzyme receptors in respiratory epithelium. Maybe taking these meds is what puts the elderly at greater risk in the first place?
Jan, maybe so. Wow. My mom and many of her neighbors in the 80+ crowd take these meds.
Delete>>> (for other readers--here's a summary from the last cited article) >>>
"Is a link between these observations possible? Is the expression of ACE2 receptor in the virus targeted cells increased by the use of ACE-inhibitor/angiotensin-receptor blocker and is the patient therefore more at risk for a severe course? We need rapid epidemiological and preclinical studies to clarify this relationship. If this were the case, we might be able to reduce the risk of fatal Covid-19 courses in many patients by temporarily replacing these drugs."
So do many not-so-elderly people. Just the single most popular ACE-I (lisinopril) and ARB (losartan) account for about 160 million prescriptions in the US annually.
DeleteAre there other drugs available to replace these drugs, though?
DeleteThere are several other classes of blood pressure meds: e.g., calcium channel blockers, like amlodipine, beta blockers like atenolol, etc. Each has its own spectrum of adverse side-effects. But ACEIs and ARBs are often considered first-line.
DeleteI see. Thanks for the scoop!
DeleteGeologic P*o#r*n#
ReplyDeleteDo you know much about this site? On some of their click-bait (top 10 spectacular sites, 20 surreal places to visit) I wonder if it were written by someone whose first language is not English? Or just cut and paste without editing?
DeleteI don't know much about the site. . .
DeleteReaper of Death
ReplyDeleteWith those short stubby arms are we certain T-rex was really a predator?
DeleteLook to 45.
DeleteNOW we're talking (mint).
ReplyDeleteThe clumpsy origin of planets. Or you science types can read the real article.
ReplyDeleteThe good news: perhaps the universe is a kinder, gentler place.
The bad news: perhaps we're all just large cat litter globs.
Stupendemys geographicus is a giant shell game. Stupendemys? Did they hire Sesame Street writers to come up with names?
ReplyDeleteSesame Street writers are great writers, sez a me.
DeleteAsteroid size comparison. These people have it in for New York. But what's the Eiffel Tower doing off Battery Park City?
ReplyDelete'Roid rage?
Delete1 Ceres, though. Are you cereous?
DeleteMy microbiology prof warned us that, if offered fried rice that had been sitting out all night, we should say, "Be serious!"
DeleteMost of those big asteroids live far from Earth. On the other hand, on November 2, the day before Election Day, we have a 1 in 240 chance of getting hit by 2018 VP1. Could panic in the streets affect the election (more than the as-yet-speculative COVID-19 pandemic)?
[The Impact Energy (Mt) -- is that megatons, as in of TNT, like we measure bombs? If so, this one's a half kiloton baby. Still, if well-placed, e.g., 38° 53′ 51.72″ N, 77° 2′ 11.4″ W....]
Imagine the impact of a >150 kg hemorrhoid hitting the country for a second time....
DeleteMeteors don't have to be big, 50 years ago Frank Zappa and Ray Manzarek told us speed kills.
Delete70-90 percent of coral reefs
ReplyDeleteAUTO MOON
ReplyDeleteCool, but it brought this to mind.
DeleteErm, that's BUS MOON.
DeleteAnd the driver might go on a BUS MOON'S holiday, eh?
LUMINANCE, TURBULENCE and VAN GOGH: The video at the end is worth a look. Now I'm thinking about 5/3. . .
ReplyDeleteRIP Freeman Dyson
ReplyDeleteI attended a talk of his at Bell Labs. Cool guy.
DeleteMy friend used to deliver UPS packages to his house. She said he was both kind and cool.
DeleteAnd, OK, nothing to do with science or writing (though I like their Fearless Flyers), RIP Trader Joe.
Delete(Not to mention their Avocado's Number Guacamole...)
DeleteBar jokes for English majors
ReplyDeleteAnd a corollary:
DeleteA priest, a rabbit, and a minister walk into a bar.
The rabbit was a typo.
Every Possible Melody Has Been Copyrighted, and They’re Now Released into the Public Domain.
ReplyDeleteReminds me (as I commented on the site) of Arthur C. Clarke's 1953 short story, "The Nine Billion Names of God."
Yes! Just saw this. >>> This >>>
Delete"Under copyright law, numbers are facts, and under copyright law, facts either have thin copyright, almost no copyright, or no copyright at all. So maybe if these numbers have existed since the beginning of time and we're just plucking them out, maybe melodies are just math, which is just facts, which is not copyrightable."
ReplyDeleteSpike protein and Covid-19
When Smith College announced at 11 a.m. today that the rest of the semester (after Friday, 3/13) will be on an online basis only, 120 Smith College alums offered housing, 50 offered financial help, and 30 offered in kind help (within a matter of 4 hours) to students displaced by the decision. The number of offers to help is rising hourly. Several international students and some students who do not have a stable home to return to consider Smith their home.
ReplyDeleteI am always proud to be a Smithie, but never prouder than today.
Takes all the cuteness out of hummingbirds.
ReplyDeleteeco, that was to be my next topic! This article has a photo of the dinosaur (7 mm long) preserved in amber and a 1 minute video:
DeleteTEENY TINY
Amber article coming soon (after the SAT on SATurday).
Correction: the skull is 7 mm long.
DeleteCool. For some reason Nature is letting me view the full pdf article (though I can't download or print it). The article has enlarged photos, 3d scans, and some pretty nifty comparisons of eye sockets with other avians.
DeleteLink to the pdf, not sure if it will work for others.
DeleteOooh, thanks, eco. I could not see the whole article before.
DeleteI think anything preserved in amber is bound to be cute (pun intended).
I've given amber insect jewelry as gifts, and even women who are squeamish about arthropods were not bugged by it (pun also intended, but I'm no SDB).
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteDid somebody mention amber from Myanmar?
DeleteI don't know about cuteness, but you know who takes all the brains out of hummingbirds? Praying mantises.
DeleteThanks for the amber alert. And for rekindling memories of a mantis snagging its nasty claws around my finger while I was climbing in a barn, and needing pliers to pry the thing off - dead after I whopped it against a wood post.
DeleteI have amber dice from Ukraine. The honey-warm color is mesmerizing.
Delete<<<---
DeleteI am the walrus
Goo goo g' joob.
Congratulations on getting on the spam/ phishing radar, and thanks for deleting whatever it was. No need to know my name's meaning.
DeleteI decided to re-read Poe's short story. The wealthy, germophobic, castle-dwelling Prince Prospero reminds me of someone, somehow....
ReplyDeleteSomewhere. . .
DeleteWhat a l o n g week!
I don't think we've even seen the end of the beginning, much less the beginning of the end.
DeleteI fear future weeks will be even longer. Are they going ahead with the SAT's? Schools around here are closing like there's a blizzard blowing.
I agree.
DeleteMany sites in Colorado will be open for the SAT. There are enough sites in Denver that most students will be able to take the test today if they wish to do so, though they may need to go to a different site from where they originally planned. DPS and CCPS officially close on Monday so they can just get the test in under the wire; I imagine that was by design as it affects so many soon-to-be rising seniors.
The student I am most heart-broken for gave up her space and SAT prep energy so she could star in the junior play which is now cancelled. She had 282 lines in the play and was so diligent and excited about her role.
Good life lesson in flexibility, changing nature of life. Be like a dune and shift and change and all that. She is going with the flow quite readily...
There will be other plays, other SATs.
Right?
Most of the schools around here also close on Monday; for some reason they shut down Berkeley High School on Friday - we have only one HS, it has a population greater than Garfield County, Utah. I haven't been in the SAT loop in many decades, not sure how that's affected here.
DeleteCan the film class tape your junior play student, and other acting students, and put that on-line? At least they would then be challenged with putting on a performance, others can see it, including the stars. All the stage's a world. Of course with schools shut down....
This also foreshadows things to come; the crises in the recent past - 9-11, 2008 economic meltdown, have only occurred at a societal level; the natural world had little effect and was little affected by those events. Thus they could be controlled by human action, although we failed miserably.
This potential health crisis is a mix of natural events (virus and biology) made manifest by human actions, intercommunication. What does it portend for future societal (and natural) catastrophes created by climate change?
A friend just left for a 3 week bird count along the Gulf Coast of Texas. I lent her my 1964 copy of Roger Tory Peterson's Field Guide to the Birds of Texas. It will be interesting to see if there are significant differences.
Boston schools are now closed for 6 weeks, until April 27.
DeleteWe are closed until April 13 but the week before Easter is spring break.
DeleteSo glad I visited my mom in February...
eco, sadly, I don't think students will be able to come back to film or act or anything except pick up their stuff.
DeleteInter connectivity is surely the universe's message.
DeleteCan you encourage your student to put on an anarchic version of the play? Get the actors together, have friends film it with their smart phones? Then post it on-line?
DeleteI'd like to think that's what I would have done as a rogue teenager. Counter the abnormality.
They are being encouraged not to congregate if there are 10 or more students. The entire junior class and some of the seniors are in the play.
DeleteSeveral of my students live with or near grandparents so they are acting with an abundance of caution.
DeleteZoom looks Iike an interesting tool once you learn not film up your nostrils, not to bob your head and not to have questionable items in the background.
DeleteAlso, don't forget to wear pants!
Pee Wee Herman was way ahead of his time with a video phone, and in his booth he had a variety of pull down screens (jungle, desert, etc) to set the mood for the phone call.
DeleteSmith College Impromptu Graduation March 12, 2020.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if Rebecca Grossman had a CO-VIDeographer?
You've got to know when to fold 'em.
ReplyDeleteIs it acceptable to tell a geologist that you want to dig deep into the cleavage, and explore what happens with a dyke in the bedding? Or will that cause a rift?
DeleteDon't forget to tip your server.
Re: gurgitation: Vampire bats.
ReplyDeleteWhiz bat
ReplyDeleteThe quest for toilet paper getting to you, WW?
DeleteMaybe so. Making me a little batty perhaps.
Delete(Actually my mom taught us to buy lots of toilet paper and other non-perishables when they are on sale so I am always stocked up. I went down to my mom's CT basement last month; her pantry is still stocked like she's buying for a family of seven. You can grocery shop for months down there.)
At least we had a gorgeous bluebird sky day today to follow the 6-8" of snow on Thursday and Friday.
Any amusing "quarantine" stories from your world out there?
Went to a local park today where my Asian students used to enjoy congregating. One of my students flew back to Viet Nam yesterday, on his parents insistence. He is likely in a better country to weather all of this. Hopefully, he will still be able to come back in the fall to attend the engineering program at a prestigious university.
DeleteWe had an hour-long 6-way video birthday party, across 4 states and 4 time zones, for my wife this week, with her sister and brother, their various daughters, and my son and his wife, which was fun.
DeleteBiking in Cambridge and Boston is certainly easier without all the people around, though sometimes a little Twilight Zone-y.
On the other hand, the brother of a good friend from college died yesterday of the virus.
I biked into Brookline today to drop something off at my son's place. As I turned off Mass Ave onto Pearl St, there was a tractor-trailer unloading pallets of merchandise for the store on the corner. I felt like it was my civic duty to ride my bike through the streets like Paul Revere, shouting "Target's got Charmin! Target's got Charmin!"
Deletejan, so sorry to read that covid-19 has reached so close to you.
DeleteThey cut away from 45's pomposity to our governor. Polis is a strong leader, articulate and dedicated.
Delete“You don’t make the timeline. The virus makes the timeline.”
ReplyDelete-- Dr. Anthony Fauci
According to Worldometer we passed China today, so I guess WE ARE #1!
DeleteI'm moving to Libya.
6/1000 folks living in The Vatican is quite high. . .
DeleteTo encourage distancing, the MLA has gone back to two spaces after a period.
ReplyDeleteLiterature lacuna.
DeleteFrom Bats to Human Lungs
ReplyDeleteLove in the Time of Covid-19. I recognized the wedding venue from my visit last summer.
ReplyDeleteWhatever it takes, eh?
DeleteFrom a fellow Smithie's RI-based company: Vaccine Development Process.
ReplyDeletePlanning a PEOT post by the end of March. (Is it really still March?)
ReplyDeleteThe new post will NOT be about covid-19.
^^^PEOTS
DeleteMagnetic personality
ReplyDeleteDid he think telling his story to The Guardian would enhance his reputation?
DeleteLittle magnets are particularly dangerous for small kids. They can get glommed together in a loop of bowel and create a surgical emergency.
DeleteEverything returns to Stealers Wheel.
DeleteHarvard Square turkeys, not practicing social distancing.
ReplyDeleteWow, beauties!
DeleteNew post on "Diatoms and Diatomaceous Earth: Beer Filtration for What Ales You" is now up (and before the end of March, as promised!).
ReplyDelete