Crack patterns in laboratory experiments on thick samples of drying cornstarch are geometrically similar to columnar joints in cooling lava found at geological sites such as the Giant's Causeway. We present measurements of the crack spacing from both laboratory and geological investigations of columnar jointing, and show how these data can be collapsed onto a single master scaling curve. This is due to the underlying mathematical similarity between theories for the cracking of solids induced by differential drying or by cooling. We use this theory to give a simple quantitative explanation of how these geometrically similar crack patterns arise from a single dynamical law rooted in the nonequilibrium nature of the phenomena. We also give sca...
Fracture mechanics successfully predicts when cracks will grow. Describing the path that cracks foll...
Columnar joints form by cracking during cooling-induced contraction of lava, allowing hydrothermal f...
Starch-water slurries are commonly used to study fracture dynamics. Drying starch cakes benefit from...
Crack patterns in laboratory experiments on thick samples of drying cornstarch are geometrically sim...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern common in igneous rocks in which cracks self-organize into a...
Columnar joints are three-dimensional fracture networks that form in cooling basalt and several othe...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern, best known from locations such as the Giant's Causeway, or ...
Regular columnar joints that originate from networklike crack patterns can be observed in basalt and...
International audienceMany natural fracture systems are characterized by a single length scale, whic...
Contraction due to drying or cooling of materials yields various self-organized crack patterns. The ...
We describe field work, analysis, and modeling of columnar joints from the Columbia River Basalt Gro...
Hydrated granular packings often crack into discrete clusters of grains when dried. Despite its ubiq...
Columnar joints are interconnected tension fractures that divide rocks into long prismatic columns. ...
We designed a simple experiment to study both the dynamical and statistical properties of cracking t...
Cracks driven by shrinkage due to cooling or drying arrange themselves via mutual interaction. For p...
Fracture mechanics successfully predicts when cracks will grow. Describing the path that cracks foll...
Columnar joints form by cracking during cooling-induced contraction of lava, allowing hydrothermal f...
Starch-water slurries are commonly used to study fracture dynamics. Drying starch cakes benefit from...
Crack patterns in laboratory experiments on thick samples of drying cornstarch are geometrically sim...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern common in igneous rocks in which cracks self-organize into a...
Columnar joints are three-dimensional fracture networks that form in cooling basalt and several othe...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern, best known from locations such as the Giant's Causeway, or ...
Regular columnar joints that originate from networklike crack patterns can be observed in basalt and...
International audienceMany natural fracture systems are characterized by a single length scale, whic...
Contraction due to drying or cooling of materials yields various self-organized crack patterns. The ...
We describe field work, analysis, and modeling of columnar joints from the Columbia River Basalt Gro...
Hydrated granular packings often crack into discrete clusters of grains when dried. Despite its ubiq...
Columnar joints are interconnected tension fractures that divide rocks into long prismatic columns. ...
We designed a simple experiment to study both the dynamical and statistical properties of cracking t...
Cracks driven by shrinkage due to cooling or drying arrange themselves via mutual interaction. For p...
Fracture mechanics successfully predicts when cracks will grow. Describing the path that cracks foll...
Columnar joints form by cracking during cooling-induced contraction of lava, allowing hydrothermal f...
Starch-water slurries are commonly used to study fracture dynamics. Drying starch cakes benefit from...