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Packing spheres on a spherical surface: New solution to a 100-year-old problem.Nelson and Weitz
Comparison of experiment (left) and theory (right) for “scars.”   |
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Particles packed onto a flat surface organize
themselves into hexagonal layer, like billiard balls before a game. The
same particles packed onto a spherical surface must have at least 12 defects,
as first shown by a theorem of Euler, and as experienced directly by looking
at a soccer ball, which has 12 pentagons among all the remaining hexagons
that make up the coating of the ball. However, the nature of the packing
of particles onto larger spherical surfaces has eluded solution since the
problem was first posed by J.J. Thomson nearly a century ago, and it remains
one of the great unsolved problems of mathematics of the twenty first century.
By studying the structure of repulsive colloidal particles on a spherical
surface, Nelson, Weitz and co-workers have shown that the pattern of defects
for large spheres forms linear scars of defects, which are analogous to
grain boundaries, except that they end in the middle of crystalline region,
since they exist on a spherical surface. This is first experimental study
of such packing, and the results are in excellent agreement with the theoretical
predictions. Such packings are observed in nature; for example the surface of viruses contain capsids, spherical objects packed onto the surface of a sphere. This work may help determine the packing of such capsids for very large viruses. This work was featured as a highlight on the NSF site: http://www.nsf.gov/od/lpa/news/03/pr0328.htm This work was also discussed in the News Scan section of May 2003 issue of Scientific American (p. 33). Reference: “Grain Boundary Scars and Spherical Crystallography,” A.R. Bausch, M.J. Bowick, A. Cacciuto, A. D. Dinsmore, M. F. Hsu, D. R. Nelson, M. G. Nikolaides, A. Travesset, D. A. Weitz, Science, 299, 1716 (2003). |
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Last Modified April 21, 2003 |
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