Scaling, clustering and avalanches for steel beads in an external magnetic field

POSTER

Abstract

We investigated avalanches using uniform 3mm steel spheres (``beads'') dropped onto a conical bead pile within a uniform magnetic field. The bead pile is built by pouring beads onto a circular base where the bottom layer of beads had been glued randomly. Beads are then individually dropped from a fixed height after which the pile is massed. This process is repeated for thousands of bead drops. By measuring the number of avalanches of a given size that occurred during the experiment, the resulting avalanche size distribution was compared to a power law description as predicted by self-organized criticality. As the magnetic field intensity increased, the beads clustered to give a larger angle of repose and we measured the change in the avalanche size distribution. The moments of the distribution give a sensitive test of mean-field theory as the universality class for these bead piles.

Authors

  • Alyse Marquinez

    The College of Wooster

  • Ingrid Thvedt

    The College of Wooster

  • Susan Y. Lehman

    The College of Wooster, The College of Wooster, Department of Physics, Wooster OH 44691

  • D.T. Jacobs

    The College of Wooster