Inertia Induces Strong Orientation Fluctuations of Nonspherical Atmospheric Particles
Taraprasad Bhowmick, Johannes Seesing, K. Gustavsson, Johannes Guettler, Yong Wang, Alain Pumir, B. Mehlig, Gholamhossein Bagheri
Abstract
The orientation of nonspherical particles in the atmosphere, such as volcanic ash and ice crystals, influences their residence times and the radiative properties of the atmosphere. Here, we demonstrate experimentally that the orientation of heavy submillimeter spheroids settling in still air exhibits decaying oscillations, whereas it relaxes monotonically in liquids. Theoretical analysis shows that these oscillations are due to particle inertia, caused by the large particle-fluid mass-density ratio. This effect must be accounted for to model solid particles in the atmosphere.
Topics & Concepts
InertiaPhysicsOrientation (vector space)Classical mechanicsMechanicsGeometryMathematicsPlanetary Science and ExplorationParticle Dynamics in Fluid FlowsAeolian processes and effects