A New Universal Principle Behind Fragmentation Predicts Size Of Any Breakup Debris

0
504

A New Universal Principle Behind Fragmentation Predicts Size Of Any Breakup Debris

clock-iconPUBLISHED8 minutes ago

A New Universal Principle Behind Fragmentation Predicts Size Of Any Breakup Debris

They are never, ever, ever, getting back together.

Dr. Alfredo Carpineti headshot

Senior Staff Writer & Space Correspondent

Alfredo has a PhD in Astrophysics and a Master's in Quantum Fields and Fundamental Forces from Imperial College London.View full profile

Alfredo has a PhD in Astrophysics and a Master's in Quantum Fields and Fundamental Forces from Imperial College London.

View full profile

a broken vase on the floor

There is order in the chaos of a broken vase.

Image credit: Anna Klymchuk/Shutterstock.com

Google prefered source badge

Imagine a beautiful vase filled with roses on a spring day, by an open window. A sudden gust of wind enters the room, the roses act as a sail, and the vase tumbles from its perch and onto the floor. The shards of that vase are, of course, a chaos of sizes and shapes. However, new research argues that behind the apparent chaos, there is a simple mathematical rule.

The rest of this article is behind a paywall. Please sign in or subscribe to access the full content.

Understanding the fragmentation of objects is crucial in material science. Sometimes objects just break due to defects, and others due to external impact. Some materials are designed to shatter in certain ways. The breaking of others informs how to make versions less likely to fall apart. The new research did not focus on the formation of the fragments, which requires knowledge of the specific material and physical processes involved, but on the statistical properties of an object, no matter the context, falling apart.

Emmanuel Villermaux at Aix-Marseille University in France and the University Institute of France has proposed that there is a principle behind the fragmentation process of an object. The idea is that of all the possible ways an object can break apart, the one that is most probable is the one that maximizes entropy. Entropy is a quantity that can be seen as the state of disorder of a system, and in the universe at large, it always increases.

Part of this statistical analysis is bound by the kinematics of the system; basically, what kind of event leads to the breakup. Part of it is the randomness of the debris formation. While chaos reigns supreme in our cosmos, this is not unconstrained. Randomness is bound to a specific conservation law discovered a decade ago.

The result is a power law that describes the distribution of sizes in the fragments created during a breakup. It is easy to assume that when an object shatters, more small pieces will be created than larger ones. What the research shows is that the distribution of these pieces follows a clear mathematical distribution. This finding matches a wide range of experimental results and models. It was even tested by crashing sugar cubes and seeing if the results agreed with the power law. They did.

This doesn’t mean that the law covers every possible material. There are cases, such as in certain liquids, where the breakup is a lot more orderly. There are also materials, such as certain plastics, for example, that are too soft. The principle does not work in those cases.  

The study is published in the journal Physical Review Letters.


clock-icon

ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED8 minutes ago

Google prefered source badge


space-icon

More Space and Physics Stories

Suche
Kategorien
Mehr lesen
Home & Garden
Lululemon’s Viral Everywhere Belt Bag Got a Luxe Makeover—and Now It’s in the ‘We Made Too Much’ Section
Lululemon’s Viral Everywhere Belt Bag Got a Luxe Makeover—and Now It’s in the ‘We Made Too Much’...
Von Test Blogger9 2025-12-29 06:00:35 0 296
Technology
Who needs October Prime Day? The Toshiba 50-inch C350 Series LED 4K TV is still at its best price at Amazon.
Best Toshiba TV deal: Save $160.99 on the Toshiba 50-inch C350 Series LED 4K TV at Amazon...
Von Test Blogger7 2025-10-09 13:00:14 0 1KB
Spiele
Hollow Knight Silksong review - a Metroidvania masterpiece
Hollow Knight Silksong review - a Metroidvania masterpiece...
Von Test Blogger6 2025-09-27 14:00:10 0 1KB
Science
6,000 Years Ago, A Mysterious Human Population Entered South America – Then Vanished Without A Trace
6,000 Years Ago, A Mysterious Human Population Entered South America – Then Vanished Without A...
Von test Blogger3 2025-06-02 20:00:17 0 3KB
Technology
The 8-in-1 EDC is the gift they didn’t see coming — and it’s just $20
The 8-in-1 EDC is the gift they didn’t see coming — and it’s just $20...
Von Test Blogger7 2025-12-06 00:00:26 0 493