Geometric frustration induces the transition between rotation and counterrotation in swirled granular media

ORAL

Abstract

Marbles in a swirled teacup exhibit a curious dynamical transition: at small densities, the marbles circulate in the same direction as the container, but at larger densities, they transition to circulating in the opposite direction. This phenomenon occurs in a range of swirled and vibrated granular systems, from industrial vibration mills to baby rattles, each observation challenging our intuitive understanding of angular momentum conservation. Using an accelerating coordinate system, we use experiments and simulations to identify the cause for the transition to counterrotation. At low densities, the grains roll freely in the container, but as density increases, antiferromagnetic-like frictional interactions between beads lead to geometrical frustration, resolved only via global circulation. I will furthermore show that in the new frame of reference this system resembles a rotating drum.

*NSF (DMR-1420570).
US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research, Applied Mathematics Program under Award No. DE-SC0012296
Harvard Kavli Institute for Bionano Science and Technology

Presenters

  • Shmuel Rubinstein

    • School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University
    • Harvard SEAS
    • SMRlab, Harvard University
    • Harvard University
    • SEAS, Harvard University

Authors

  • Lisa Lee

    • Harvard University
  • John Paul Ryan

    • Department of Computer Science, Cornell University
  • Miranda Holmes-Cerfon

    • Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University
    • Math, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences
    • Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences
  • Shmuel Rubinstein

    • School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University
    • Harvard SEAS
    • SMRlab, Harvard University
    • Harvard University
    • SEAS, Harvard University