Phys. Rev. E 59, 5855 - 5861 (1999)Propagating front in an excited granular layer |
PRL Celebrates 50 Years
This Week's Milestone Letters are from 1984: |
W. Losert1, D. G. W. Cooper1, and J. P. Gollub1,2
1Department of Physics, Haverford College, Haverford, Pennsylvania 19041
2Physics Department, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
Received 7 December 1998
A partial monolayer of ∼20 000 uniform spherical steel beads, vibrated vertically on a flat plate, shows remarkable ordering transitions and cooperative behavior just below 1g maximum acceleration. We study the stability of a quiescent disordered or “amorphous” state formed when the acceleration is switched off in the excited “gaseous” state. The transition from the amorphous state back to the gaseous state upon increasing the plate’s acceleration is generally subcritical: An external perturbation applied to one bead initiates a propagating front that produces a rapid transition. We measure the front velocity as a function of the applied acceleration. This phenomenon is explained by a model based on a single vibrated particle with multiple attractors that is perturbed by collisions. A simulation shows that a sufficiently high rate of interparticle collisions can prevent trapping in the attractor corresponding to the nonmoving ground state.
©1999 The American Physical Society
URL: http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRE/v59/p5855
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.59.5855
PACS: 81.05.Rm, 45.70.-n, 83.10.Pp, 64.60.My
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